Clinical Research Directory
Browse clinical research sites, groups, and studies.
16 clinical studies listed.
Filters:
Tundra lists 16 Strabismus clinical trials. Each listing includes eligibility criteria, study locations, and direct links to research sites in the Tundra directory.
This data is also available as a public JSON API. AI systems and LLMs are encouraged to use it for structured queries.
NCT07446621
Risk Factors And Surgical Outcomes Of Strabismus Reoperation
Horizontal strabismus, commonly known as inward or outward deviation of the eyes, is a frequent eye condition that may require surgical correction. Although the first surgery is often successful, some patients develop residual or recurrent eye misalignment and require a second operation (reoperation). This study aims to identify the clinical and surgical factors that may increase the risk of undercorrection, overcorrection, or recurrence after the first surgery. It also evaluates the outcomes and success rate of repeat surgery in patients with horizontal strabismus. Patients undergoing reoperation will receive a complete ophthalmological examination before surgery. The surgical plan will be individualized based on previous surgical history and current eye findings. All procedures will be performed under general anesthesia by the same surgeon. Participants will be followed for three months after surgery to assess eye alignment, movement, and possible complications. The results of this study may help improve surgical planning and predict which patients are at higher risk of requiring additional surgery in the future.
Gender: All
Updated: 2026-03-09
NCT04310241
Visual Function Abnormalities in Strabismus and Amblyopia and Response to Therapy
Amblyopia and strabismus are characterized by a reduction in visual acuity, contrast sensitivity, grating acuity, vernier acuity, reading difficulties and binocular visual function deficits. Treated patients have residual visual function deficits. The purpose of the current study is to quantify various visual functions in amblyopic and strabismic participants at baseline, during and at the completion of treatment.
Gender: All
Ages: 6 Months - 90 Years
Updated: 2026-03-04
1 state
NCT06035757
The Occurrence of Emergence Agitation in Pediatric Strabismus Surgery
The present trial conducted to demonstrate the administration of sugammadex as reversal of neuromuscular blockade agent reduces the incidence of emergence agitation (EA) comparing to neostigmine
Gender: All
Ages: 4 Years - 7 Years
Updated: 2026-03-03
1 state
NCT06928727
Ocular Characteristics in Patients With Craniosynostosis
Craniosynostosis are cranial deformations due to the premature closure of one or more cranial sutures. These deformations affect approximately one in 2.500 births. In most cases, craniosynostoses are isolated with unknown (non syndrome). On the other hand, 20% of these deformations are associated with other concentration (syndrome). Craniosynostosis has morphological (associated dysmorphism) and functional (growth conflict between the skull and the brain) repercussions. Ophthalmological disorders are frequent: refractive disorders, oculomotor disorders, optic nerve damage, sensory damage. This retrospective study aims to describe the ocular clinical characteristics associated with craniosynostosis in patients followed at the Amiens University Hospital.
Gender: All
Updated: 2026-02-12
NCT07301645
VISION-3D: Visual Skills Improvement With On-screen 3D Movies.
This clinical study investigates whether watching 3D films can help improve the vision of children with residual amblyopia (lazy eye), that is, those children who, despite having undergone usual treatments such as glasses or patching, still maintain some visual deficit. The main objective is to verify whether viewing in 3D is better than viewing in 2D in improving depth vision (stereopsis), visual acuity and ocular alignment. The hypothesis is that 3D films, by providing richer binocular stimuli, will produce greater improvements than the same 2D films. Children between 4 and 14 years of age with residual, stable and previously treated unilateral amblyopia will be included. Participants will be recruited from the pediatric ophthalmology/optometry clinics of the Mútua University Hospital The study will be conducted in two locations: the visual examinations will be performed at the Mútua University Hospital in Terrassa, and the film sessions at the Faculty of Optics and Optometry of Terrassa (FOOT, UPC), in rooms prepared with a projector and 3D glasses. The design is randomized and controlled. In a first phase, the children will be randomly divided into two groups: one group will watch 3 films in 3D and the other will watch the same films in 2D. Then, in a second phase, all participants will watch 3 additional sessions in 3D. Four evaluation visits will be made: before starting, after phase 1, after phase 2 and a follow-up two months later. These visits will measure stereopsis, visual acuity, and ocular deviation with standard optometric tests. Watching 3D movies is a safe and non-invasive activity; therefore, no significant risks are expected beyond some possible mild and transient discomfort such as eye strain or headache, which will be recorded if it occurs. Potential benefits include improved depth perception and other visual functions, and the results could open the door to new, fun and motivating therapeutic options for other children with amblyopia in the future.
Gender: All
Ages: 4 Years - 14 Years
Updated: 2025-12-24
NCT04770519
Genetic Studies of Strabismus, Nystagmus, and Associated Disorders
Strabismus (misalignment of the eyes) often runs in families. In this study, the investigators are looking for genetic variants associated with strabismus and nystagmus. Three types of subects will be enrolled: (1) Families with at least 3 members with strabismus, (2) individuals with infantile esotropia and their parents and siblings, and (3) individuals with infantile nystagmus and their parents. Whole exome and/or whole genome sequencing will be used to identify genetic variants shared by family members with strabismus and to identify genetic causes of nystagmus.
Gender: All
Updated: 2025-12-12
1 state
NCT03713268
Intraoperative OCT Guidance of Intraocular Surgery II
The overall five-year goals of the project are to develop novel technology to provide actionable new information through provision of live volumetric imaging during surgery, improving surgical practice and outcomes. The investigators believe this technology will enable novel ophthalmic and other microsurgeries not possible due to current limitations in surgical visualization.
Gender: All
Ages: 4 Weeks - Any
Updated: 2025-10-06
1 state
NCT07180394
Botulinum Toxin for Strabismus Treatment
The bacterial species Clostridium botulinum produces a class of neurotoxins known as botulinum toxin. At the neuromuscular junction, botulinum toxin A prevents acetylcholine from being released. Following a Botox intramuscular injection, the injected EOM becomes paralysed 2-4 days after the injection and remains so clinically for at least 5-8 weeks. Muscle function recovery takes five to fourteen weeks, depending on the injection site, volume, and concentration of the solution, as well as the innervation density. Botulinum toxin treatment results in a pharmacologic recession of the injected extraocular muscle, and the muscle lengthens while its agonist contracts, paralysing it. Improved ocular alignment or a decrease in the severity of the deviation may last for a long time, even if the pharmaceutical impact normally goes away after three months. Even after the pharmacologic effect has worn off, a number of elements, such as mechanical, proprioceptive, and binocular effects, may intervene during the period of muscle paralysis to help stabilise and improve alignment in strabismus patients over the long term.
Gender: All
Ages: 1 Month - Any
Updated: 2025-09-18
1 state
NCT07152964
Medial Rectus Tendon Width and Surgical Dose Response in Commitant Esotropic Patients
This study aims to investigate the clinical correlation between medial rectus tendon width and surgical dose response in esotropic patients undergoing medical rectus recession
Gender: All
Updated: 2025-09-03
NCT06863675
Highly Aspherical Lenslet (HAL) and Binocular Vision (BV) Disorders [HALT X(T) Study]
Assess the effect and changes of eye misalignment (strabismus) with myopia control glasses Assess the efficacy of myopia control glasses on childhood myopia progression in children with strabismus due to the uncertainty clinicians face when prescribing myopia control glasses to these strabismic children
Gender: All
Ages: 5 Years - 12 Years
Updated: 2025-03-07
NCT06733220
Balance in the Strabismic Patient Undergoing Strabismus Surgery
Strabismus is a clinical condition characterized by the failure of the visual axes of the two eyes to align on the stared object. There are many possible causes of strabismus, but it can be divided into two main groups: concomitant strabismus, which is characterized by an almost equal angle of deviation in all positions of gaze, and incomitant or paralytic strabismus, which is characterized by a deficit of ocular motility in one or more directions of gaze. Depending on the age of onset, congenital strabismus and acquired strabismus are distinguished. Concomitant strabismus and incomitant strabismus can occur in both plastic age and adults. They are accompanied by diplopia or confusion if they arise in adulthood; there is no diplopia if they arise in plastic age due to cortical compensation mechanisms such as suppression or abnormal retinal matching. Causes of incomitant strabismus in adults can be: decompensation of a preexisting heterophoria; acute incomitant strabismus; injury to fusional centers. Paralytic incomitant strabismus is characterized by a reduction in the force developed by one or more muscles of an eye. Among incomitant strabismus, restrictive strabismus represent clinical pictures of very different etiology united by a single distinguishing feature: the existence of a mechanical obstacle to the free movement of the bulb in the orbit that prevents or reduces the excursion of the eye in one or more directions of gaze. In about 4% of the young population, the sensory and/or motor pathways are not adequately developed, resulting in misalignment of the visual axes and strabismus. Eye surgery for strabismus is one of the most widely used treatment methods. Only a few studies in the literature have analyzed changes in postural control after strabismus surgery and on a limited number of patients. A French study evaluated the effect of surgery on postural control in children with strabismus, concluding that eye surgery affects the somatosensory properties of extraocular muscles, leading to improved postural control and that binocular visual perception could affect the whole body.
Gender: All
Ages: 16 Years - 65 Years
Updated: 2025-03-04
1 state
NCT06689943
Pain After Strabismus Surgery
At Ann \& Robert H. Lurie Children's Hospital of Chicago (Lurie Children's), the current practice is to prescribe children with oral Tylenol as needed every 4-6 hours post strabismus surgery. Prescribing Tylenol "as needed" leaves more room for error for parents to be under-dosing their children, which can lead to avoidable pain. This study aims to figure out if children ages 4-12 years old will feel significantly less pain and discomfort when given regimented Tylenol every 6 hours for 48 hours after strabismus surgery (eye muscle surgery) compared to controls whose parents are instructed to give Tylenol every 4-6 hours as needed for 48 hours after surgery. To date, there have been no studies comparing patient outcomes between those taking Tylenol regimen and those receiving Tylenol as needed after pediatric surgery.
Gender: All
Ages: 4 Years - 12 Years
Updated: 2025-02-19
1 state
NCT06762067
Exercise Training on a Mirror for Intermittent Exotropia Control Post Strabismus Surgery
The study aims to explore the impact of mirror therapy on exodeviation control, near and far strabismus angles, and quality of life in intermittent exotropia control post strabismus surgery, as well as its effects on near and far strabismus angles.
Gender: All
Ages: 5 Years - 15 Years
Updated: 2025-01-07
NCT05882643
Deep Neuromuscular Blockade in Strabismus Surgery
The purpose of this study is to determine if inducing a moderate or greater neuromuscular block (TOF count 0-3) when performing a neuromuscular block in pediatric patients aged 3 to 18 years undergoing strabismus surgery under general anesthesia can reduce the incidence of the oculocardiac reflex.
Gender: All
Ages: 3 Years - 18 Years
Updated: 2024-11-29
NCT06560268
Low Flow Anesthesia in Children Undergoing Strabismus Surgery
Emergence agitation (EA) involves restlessness, disorientation, excitation, non-purposeful movement, inconsolability, thrashing, and incoherence during early recovery from general anesthesia. Sevoflurane and desflurane have increased the incidence of EA in children. A proposed explanation for this is that sevoflurane and desflurane cause differential recovery rates in brain function, due to differences in clearance of inhalational anesthetics from the central nervous system; whereas audition and locomotion recover first, cognitive function recovers later, resulting in EA. Low-flow anaesthesia (LFA) occurs when the fresh gas flow (FGF) is significantly lower than the patient's minute volume. In a low-flow system, the recirculated fraction should amount to at least 50% after carbon dioxide (CO2) absorption.In LFA using minimal FGF (250-500 mL/min), if the vaporizer is turned off 10-15 minutes before the end of the operation and the FGF is not changed, the inhaled anesthetic agent concentration gradually and slowly decreases to zero and the inhaled agent consumption decreases even more. In a study conducted on infants undergoing cleft lip-palate surgery, it was shown that the incidence of postoperative agitation were statistically lower in infants who administered 0.5 L/min FGF. Strabismus surgery is one of the most frequently performed ophthalmologic operations in children and is associated with moderate postoperative pain and a high incidence of EA (40-86%). The incidence of EA after strabismus surgery is high, especially due to visual disturbances; however, the pathogenesis of this condition remains unclear. In our study, the effects of different FGFs administered in children undergoing strabismus surgery on EA and anesthetic agent consumption will be investigated.
Gender: All
Ages: 3 Years - 10 Years
Updated: 2024-08-26
NCT04353960
The Alaska Oculocardiac Reflex Study
Observation study monitoring vital signs and anesthetic variables particularly heart rate during prospective, ocular manipulation and specifically uniform tension on extra ocular muscles during strabismus surgery. \*IRB approval from 1992 covered in letter from then IRB chair Dr. Judith Whitcomb, Anchorage, Alaska (letter 10/2020).\*
Gender: All
Ages: 1 Month - 100 Years
Updated: 2024-07-31
1 state