Parks–Bielschowsky three-step test

The Parks–Bielschowsky three-step test,[1] also known as Park's three-step test or Bielschowsky head tilt test,[2] is a method used to isolate the paretic extraocular muscle, particularly superior oblique muscle and trochlear nerve (IVth cranial nerve),[3] in acquired vertical double vision.[4] It was originally described by Marshall M. Parks.[5]

Bielschowsky's head tilt test

When a healthy individual tilts their head, the superior oblique and superior rectus muscles of the eye closest to the shoulder keep the eye level. The inferior oblique and inferior rectus muscles keep the other eye level. In patients with superior oblique palsy, the superior rectus muscle’s action is not counteracted by the superior oblique muscles. This leads to vertical deviation of the affected eye when the head is tilted towards the effected eye. However, there is no deviation when the head is tilted towards the unaffected eye because the superior oblique muscle is not stimulated in the effected eye, but rather it is stimulated in the unaffected eye.[6] When there is a discrepancy in ocular deviation based on which way the head is tilted, the patient is diagnosed with unilateral palsy of the superior oblique muscle due to damage in the Trochlear Nerve.

People with superior oblique palsy on one side experience double vision, which is improved or even abolished by tilting the head towards the shoulder on the unaffected side. Tilting the head towards the shoulder on the affected side will make the double vision worse by causing increased separation of the two images seen by the patient.

History

The physiologic basis of the head tilt test was explained by Alfred Bielschowsky and Hofmann[7] in 1935.[8] However, Nagel described it 30 years prior to Bielschowsky when he noted that the combined action of the superior rectus muscle and the superior oblique muscle of one eye and of the inferior rectus and inferior oblique muscles in the fellow eye causes incycloduction and excycloduction.[9] The procedure that we now follow was given by Marshall M. Parks.[10]

References

  1. Yeung, Pauline HN; Lam, Andrew KC (10 September 1998). "Fourth nerve palsy with monovision". Clinical and Experimental Optometry. 81 (5): 206–209. PMID 12482321. doi:10.1111/j.1444-0938.1998.tb06737.x.
  2. Elliott, David B. "6.16: Identifying the Defective Muscle: Parks 3-Step Test". Clinical Procedures in Primary Eye Care (4th ed.). Retrieved 2 February 2014. citing von Noorden GK: Binocular vision and ocular motility: Theory and management of strabismus. London, CV Mosby, 2002.
  3. Yanoff, Myron; Duker, Jay S. (13 December 2013). Ophthalmology: Expert Consult: Online and Print. Elsevier Health Sciences. p. 1220. ISBN 978-1-4557-3984-4.
  4. Wang, Frederick M. "Strabismus" (PDF): 6. Retrieved 2 February 2014.
  5. Helveston, Eugene M. (ed.). "Diagnosis and Classification of Superior Oblique Palsy". Project ORBIS International Inc. Retrieved 2 February 2014.
  6. "Head Tilt Test." Head Tilt Test. Orbis Telemedicine, 2003. Web. 08 Dec. 2011. <http://telemedicine.orbis.org/bins/content_page.asp?cid=735-2858-4397-2804-3110-3021-3037>.
  7. 1 citing Spielmann A: A translucent occluder for study of eye position under unilateral or bilateral cover test. Am Orthopt J 36:65, 1986.
  8. Trochlear Nerve Palsy on eMedicine
  9. 1 citing Harwerth, RS; Smith, EL 3rd; Boltz, RL; Crawford, ML; von Noorden, GK (1983). "Behavioral studies on the effect of abnormal early visual experience in monkeys: temporal modulation sensitivity.". Vision Research. 23 (12): 1511–7. PMID 6666052. doi:10.1016/0042-6989(83)90163-3.
  10. "Head Tilt Test". Retrieved 2 February 2014.

Further reading

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