Chapter 91 The Fadenoperation JAMES B. SPRAGUE Table Of Contents |
In 1974, Cüppers described the “Fadenoperation” at the
second meeting of the International Strabismological Association.1 Two years later, Mühlendyck presented this new procedure to a US
audience.2 Numerous reports subsequently appeared in the US and European literature
on appropriate applications for this new technique, and on their success.3–9 Cüppers called his technique the “Fadenoperation,” or “string operation” because “faden” means suture or string in German. The common English usage, “faden suture,” is thus redundant. The procedure has also been called “arc of contact surgery,” “the posterior fixation procedure,” and “retro-equatorial myopexy.” In this chapter, I have used de Decker's abbreviation “Fd” for the procedure as both noun and adjective. This chapter describes the theory of Fd, its indications, surgical techniques and complications. Although I have relied primarily on material readily available in English for the US reader, I have expanded the European references in this revision because Fd remains more popular in Europe than in the United States. |
THEORY | |
In 1941, Peter suggested weakening a rectus muscle by suturing it posteriorly
to the sclera.10 In 1958, Tour and Asbury11 noted that the rectus muscle has rotational effect that extends as long
as its direction of tangency, at which point the muscle becomes progressively
more of a retractor and less of a rotator. Cüppers1 reasoned that suturing the muscle to the posterior sclera would create
artificial paralysis, or a controlled incomitance, by weakening the rotational
ability of a muscle only in its field of action. This was his
so-called dynamic angle. He felt that the balance of forces between
agonist and antagonist in primary position would not change. If there
was strabismus in primary gaze, the so-called static angle, he added a
standard recession to the muscle treated with posterior fixation. Alan Scott diagrammed the mechanics of Fd.12 He suggested that changing the arc of contact of the muscle with the globe reduces the lever arm formed by the muscle insertion, the center of rotation of the globe, and the origin of the muscle (Fig. 1). Scott's mechanical model suggested that the posterior suture needed to be 10 to 12 mm from the insertion for the medial rectus, 12 to 14 for the superior and lateral recti, and 14 to 16 for the lateral rectus.
Kushner measured saccadic velocity after the Fd.13 He expected to find decreased velocity in the field of the operated muscle but did not. He questioned whether the Fd changed the torque active on the muscle as would be suggested by the lever arm theory and also noted that the lever arm theory would not explain the effect of Fd without a recession. He stressed the effect of the amount of muscle contained in the suture and how effectively it was immobilized to explain the clinical effect of the operation. Clark and colleagues14 examined the theory of the Fd in the context of the extraocular muscle pulleys previously described by Demer and coworkers,15 who described connective tissue sleeves that envelop and position each rectus muscle. Given that the anterior portion of the sleeve overlies the area at the equator where the posterior fixation suture is placed, they suggested that displacement of the pulley sleeve by the posterior suture itself or by extensive sharp dissection posteriorly results in mechanical restriction rather than a reduction in torque during muscle contraction. Their studies that used magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) did not show a change in tangency and thus did not predict a reduction in torque to explain the effect of the Fd. Mechanical restriction created by the Fd would explain the effect of the procedure without simultaneous recession of the muscle. It could also explain the variable results that many researchers have noted. Regardless of the theory of how it works, there are five points to consider in applying the theory of the Fd in clinical practice and also in evaluating the literature:
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TECHNIQUE | ||
Cüppers1 described disinserting the muscle, placing two sutures though the sclera
under the muscle, and then bringing them through the muscle. This is
thought to spare the center of the muscle and the circulation of the
ciliary vessels. De Decker4 used two sutures at the muscle edge, but preferred to leave the muscle
in place if a simultaneous recession was not needed. He also preferred
to secure the muscle with a triple loop to prevent it's sliding
through the suture. Mühlendyck2,17 used a similar technique including 2 mm of the muscle on each side. He
stressed the importance of the knot's being tight and described
a patient who had initially done well but whose ocular deviation had returned. The
suture had slipped and the knot had migrated forward.17 He also stressed the importance of avoiding the long ciliary arteries
and parasympathetic nerves. For the superior rectus, Sprague and colleagues5 preferred a single double armed suture brought up through the middle of
the muscle and tied on its orbital surface.8 When simultaneous recession was not indicated, Castilla and colleagues22 passed a suture over the muscle with attachments to the sclera at each edge. Eggers (personal comunication, 2000) has used Supramid sutures for this. Schroeder and Schroeder23 suggested tying a 17-mm section of 2-mm wide silicon band across the muscle. The muscle can then slide under the suture or band, with an effective posterior point of tangency. This technique is claimed to restrict the muscle without increasing muscle stiffness and with minimal scar, thus facilitating reoperation. Exposure is a major problem in performing the Fd, so as to place the suture posteriorly while at the same time avoiding unnecessary dissection. A fiberoptic headlight and loupe magnification are always used. The technique followed by Sprague and colleagues5 uses a limbal incision. The muscle is isolated on a suture and cleaned of fascial attachments. An extra suture marks the muscle where the posterior fixation suture will engage it (Fig. 3). This indicates the distance back from which that the posterior fixation suture will be placed, less the amount of recession. The slack created by the recession is therefore posterior to the posterior fixation suture. The muscle is released from the globe and the globe is held over with a traction suture woven through the insertion. Small, malleable brain retractors or thin orbital retractors under the muscle hold the muscle and orbital contents back (Fig. 4). The scleral sutures will determine how the muscle is to be displaced: vertically in the case of the horizontal recti, horizontally in the case of the vertical recti. Two sutures are used on the medial rectus to avoid the long ciliary vessels in the sclera that can be cut with a single central suture. On the vertical muscles, a single suture in the middle can be used (Fig. 5). In both the one- and two-suture techniques, the needle pass through the sclera must be deep enough to prevent the suture from pulling out. The suture is brought through the muscle (see Fig. 5) and tied(Fig. 6). The recession is completed (see Fig. 6). There should be no tension on the muscle between the posterior suture and the new insertion of the recessed muscle. A videotape has been produced by Gerhard Cibis, which illustrates this surgical procedure.24
Heavy, nonabsorbable sutures should be used. Supramyd, a nonreactive suture type, does not drag tissue and is easy to tie. It is available in 5-0 diameter with short spatula needles. Mersilene and Dacron are more readily available, nonreactive, and can be procured in a 5-0 size with a short, flat spatula needle, such as the Alcon T-1 or D-5 models. It is helpful to have a short needle because the posterior surgical space is confined and the exposure is usually limited. The posterior fixation suture is placed at least 14 mm posterior to the original insertion when operating on the medial, superior and inferior rectus muscles. Placement of a suture 14 mm posterior to the insertion of the superior rectus requires identification of the posterior border of the superior oblique tendon and the adjacent vortex veins. Suturing into the sclera through the tendon may not provide adequate posterior fixation of the superior rectus. The tendon should be brought forward and the posterior suture placed behind it. Alternatively, an incision can be made through Tenon's capsule behind the superior oblique to give access to the sclera.8 Because of the long arc of contact of the lateral rectus muscle, the posterior suture would have to be placed at least 17 mm posterior to the original insertion; this is technically challenging because it is close to the macula. Scott25 has described an adjustable hang back technique which can be used on the lateral rectus using simultaneous resection and recession. This allows attachment of the muscle stump where the posterior fixation sutures would be. Because the muscle in front of this point is removed, an adjustable suture technique can be used or a hang back suture can be used to avoid suturing posteriorly. The muscle is allowed to hang back as much or more than the resection. He used scleral tunnels to prevent vertical displacement. His study described three patients with horizontal incomitance in his initial publication and he has since operated on another 20 patients without major complications (A.B. Scott, personal communication, 2000). Bock and associates26 described five patients in whom the muscle was adjusted and 7 others without adjustment. They found undercorrection but were cautious in the amount of resection done. There is not yet enough experience with this procedure to create a surgical nomogram. Potential serious problems include late overcorrection and difficulty in reoperation. Hoover27 described an adjustable technique with slip knots on both the posterior sutures and on the hang-back suture for the insertion. Kushner13 found that adjusting the hang back suture was effective without loosening the posterior fixation sutures. |
INDICATIONS AND RESULTS |
In the United States, the Fd has been used primarily to treat incomitant secondary strabismus, dissociated vertical deviation, high AC:A esotropia, and the nystagmus blockage syndrome. It has also been used as an alternative to the Knapp procedure for double elevator palsy, for the ptosis in same condition, and as an alternative to marginal myotomy.9 In Europe, the Fd has been used as a primary procedure to correct for esotropia.4,17,28,29 |
INCOMITANT STRABISMUS |
The Fd can be used to weaken normal function of the contralateral yoke
muscle, which balances the reduced force of a paretic or restricted muscle. It
is indicated when surgery on the ipsilateral rectus muscle is
likely to cause strabismus in primary position or when surgery would
be difficult after retinal detachment surgery or with thyroid myopathy. Saunders30 treated three patients with incomitant vertical strabismus and Buckley and Meekins reported on 17 additional patients.31 All were successfully managed with posterior fixation of the contralateral nonparetic inferior rectus. Buckley and Meekins also found that a Fd with the posterior suture 13 mm from the insertion was effective for patients with vertical deviations in downgaze that varied from 8 to 20 prism diopters (PDs). Kushner32 successfully used the Fd on the inferior rectus on 10 patients with -1 to -2 limited depression in the other eye. If the involved eye did not depress at all, he found the Fd to be ineffective Parks and Eisenbaum34 and von Noorden and Murray35 used the Fd to reduce upshoot in lateral gaze as found in Duane's syndrome. Parks and Eisenbaum also detected some improvement in type I Duane's with posterior fixation alone or in combination with a recession of the lateral rectus. They found no benefit with posterior fixation of the vertical rectus muscles. Most of their patients with posterior fixation of horizontal muscles had other horizontal surgery in addition to the Fd. Von Noorden and Murray34 successfully treated upshoot in four patients with type III Duane's and one with type I using the Fd on both medial and lateral rectus muscles. They also performed appropriate recessions at the same sitting. Patients with Duane's syndrome who fixate with the involved eye often have unacceptable secondary strabismus of the normal eye. The Fd can be successfully used on the appropriate horizontal rectus muscle of the uninvolved eye. In addition, Saunders et al were able to expand the field of single binocular vision in three patients with type II Duane's and in one patient with type I. Surgery was limited to the normal eye in one patient. Hypotropia with pseudoptosis with hypotropia can be treated with Fd to the contra lateral superior rectus. Cüppers36 described this initially; more recently Spahn and Klainguti37 reported on two patients. Grimmett and Lambert38 described two patients with hypertropia in upgaze after cataract surgery without inferior rectus weakness who were treated successfully with a Fd and a recession of the ipsilateral superior rectus. Two additional patients with less vertical incomitance did well with only superior rectus recession. |
DISSOCIATED VERTICAL DEVIATION |
Shortly after the Fd was first described, several authors reported success
treating unilateral and bilateral DVD with the Fd in comparison to
historical controls.5,8,39 Sprague and associates5 emphasized that simultaneous recession of the superior rectus was also
necessary and that the recessed portion of the muscle had to be behind
the posterior suture. Jampolsky40 considered that a large recession was better for DVD than the Fd and that
the Fd was only effective because it produced an augmented recession. Lorenz and associates41 compared Fd with and without recession and 10 mm superior rectus recession for DVD in 42 patients (52 eyes). Their patients were divided into small groups, and the indications they chose for the procedure are not clear in the study as published. They found the Fd more effective over the first 2 months of follow-up; they stressed the need of recession with deviations over 14 PDs. Esswein and coworkers42 compared superior rectus Fd to large superior rectus recessions for DVD and found better results with recession alone. However, their Fd technique did not put the suture 14 mm posterior to the insertion and did not always include a large recession of the superior rectus. They did not specify the position of the suture in relation to the recession. Unilateral Fd has an advantage over a large unilateral superior rectus recession when concern exists about postoperative hypotropia.5,39 It is also useful in the rare situation where the involved eye is hypotropic in the non dissociated position. |
ESOTROPIA WITH HIGH ACCOMODATIVE CONVERGENCE:ACCOMODATION RATIO |
Given that the Fd should have its greatest effect in the field of action
of the operated muscle, it should be effective for esotropia present
only at near or greater than at near, when the medial recti are said
to be overacting. Von Noorden18 reported successful results in 11 of 12 patients who had had previous
medial rectus recessions. Leitch and partners43 reported on 31 patients with convergence excess esotropia operated on
with the Fd or with simultaneous large medial rectus recessions. They
asserted that the Fd was an effective primary treatment. Klombers and
Buckley44 reported retrospectively on 36 consecutive patients with high AC:A esotropia, which
was defined by the gradient method. They successfully used
the Fd with and without simultaneous medial rectus muscle recession. They
described the procedure as reliable and effective. Schroeder and
Schroeder23 used their modification of the “muscle belt” on 206 patients
and reported success in reducing the near angle. Klainguti and coleagues45 reported on 50 patients operated with the Fd or with conventional horizontal
surgery. They placed the suture 13 to 13.5 mm posterior to the
insertion without simultaneous recession and found the Fd effective in
reducing both the distant and near deviation. Stärk and associates46 reported a series of 83 patients and reduced the distance-near disparity
in 90% of them using the Fd and simultaneous recession. There were
only two overcorrections. However, in a prospective study, Kushner and colleagues47 treated high-AC:A esotropic patients with augmented medial rectus recessions or with recessions with the Fd. They found the Fd to be less successful and less predictable than large bilateral medial recessions. Unilateral Fd has been used to augment medial rectus rerecession and to treat high AC:A esotropia with marked amblyopia using unilateral surgery.48,49 For example, Elsas and Mays49 operated on 10 patients with 20/200 or worse vision in the esotropic eye and 20 PD or more of esotropia at near than at far. They added a Fd to unilateral medial rectus recession in three patients and to conventional recession-resection surgery in the remaining seven patients. Four of the latter were overcorrected at distance, suggesting that the amount of resection should be decreased. All were improved at near. Pollard50 reported on 39 patients with small (i.e., 12 to 16 PDs) deviation at distance with 10 to 19 PD more esotropia at near. He recessed one medial rectus 5 mm with a Fd 15 mm posterior to the insertion. Twenty-one patients had severe amblyopia, four required reoperation for consecutive exotropia. Eighteen patients had good vision in the operated eye, and 15 (83%) had a reduction of the distance-near disparity to less than 10 PDs. Exotropia subsequently developed in one patient. |
EXOTROPIA WITH HIGH AC:A RATIO |
Brodsky and Fray51 described six patients with exotropia and high AC:A. All were treated with lateral rectus recessions for the distant deviation and medial rectus Fd 13 mm posterior to the insertion without recession. Five of the six did not require bifocals postoperatively. |
NYSTAGMUS BLOCKAGE SYNDROME |
In 1966, Adelstein and Cüppers52 described a syndrome of variable esotropia with nystagmus, theso-called nystagmus blockage syndrome (NBS). They considered that the nystagmus component of the syndrome was reduced when both eyes were in adduction and that the angle of esodeviation typically increased with a decreased amplitude of nystagmus. A head turn was present, even when one eye was occluded. Mühlendyck2 presented this to a US audience in 1975 and advocated standard recession for the basic, or so-called static, angle with the Fd to control the variable, or so-called dynamic angle. Since these initial reports, there has been debate over the true prevalence of this syndrome. Von Noorden and Wong53 summarized their surgical experience treating NBS and found their success to be less predictable than that expected with routine cases of esotropia. They did not find a difference in effect between bilateral medial rectus recessions with or without Fd. |
CONGENITAL ESOTROPIA |
Medial rectus Fd without recession has been successfully used in Europe for congenital esotropia and is claimed to produce fewer overcorrections than conventional recessions compared with historical controls. Happe and Suleiman29 reported on 1569 children whose initial procedure was a Fd without recession. Of their patients, 49 had consecutive exotropia, of which 34 cases were obvious in the immediate postoperative period. Iuvara-Bommeli and Klainguti followed up on 6 esotropic children after Fd alone and 39 after Fd and bilateral medial recessions of 1 to 3 mm. In their group, 70% had satisfactory results, with an average follow-up of 34 months. |
HIGH MYOPIA |
Krzizok and colleagues55 have looked for muscle displacement in high myopes with MRI scanning. They found inferior dislocation of the lateral rectus, which they suggest could explain esotropia and hypotropia. In addition to medial rectus recession, they repositioned the lateral rectus in the physiologic meridian with a posterior suture in addition to resection. |
COMPLICATIONS |
Most complications are related to the problem of poor exposure, leading
to inadvertent anterior placement of the suture, a loosely tied suture, or
a shallow needle pass though sclera; all lead to a poor result. Hemorrhage
can occur from cutting or avulsing a vortex vein. The sutures
can presumably pull out, because good initial results can change dramatically. Mühlendyck17 noted scleral perforations in 4 of 2721 cases. Spielmann28 reported 3 eyes with scars in 4000 cases. Alio and Faci57 found 15% of 187 eyes had fundus scars after uneventful Fd using 4-0 Mersilene. Lyons and partners57 reviewed 100 patients and found only 7 with appropriately located chorioretinal scars. They used 5-0 Ethibond with a semicirclular spatulate needle. De Decker4 reported 3 perforations among 1000 cases without describing the follow-up. Roggenkämper58 found 10 choroidal scars without perforation after 2000 procedures. Endophthalmitis has also been described after the Fd.59 The procedure is described by some as easily reversible. Others have had difficulty releasing scarring under the muscle as well as at the site of the posterior suture. Experimental data in rabbits suggest that significant scarring occurs in the first month.20 Therefore, the procedure may be most reversible early. The Fd is an important part of the strabismus surgeon's armamentarium, although it is not widely used for simple cases in the United States. It is technically difficult and any claim for good results or bad must be evaluated with the knowledge of precisely how far back the posterior fixation suture was placed, whether a recession was done, and how. |
ACKNOWLEDGMENT |
The drawings in this chapter were prepared by Paul Mitchell. |