Duane syndrome: A congenital eye movement disorder in which there is miswiring of the eye muscles, causing some eye muscles to contract when they should not and other eye muscles not to contract when they should. People with the syndrome have a limited (and sometimes no) ability to move the eye outward toward the ear (to abduct the eye) and, in most cases, a limited ability to move the eye inward toward the nose (to adduct the eye). Often, when the eye moves toward the nose, the eyeball also pulls into the socket (retracts), the eye opening narrows and, in some cases, the eye moves upward or downward. Many patients with Duane syndrome turn their face to maintain binocular vision and compensate for improper turning of the eyes.
Duane syndrome is unilateral (with only one eye affected) in about 80% of cases. The remaining 20% of cases are bilateral (with both eyes affected) with one eye usually more severely affected than the other.
Duane syndrome is isolated (it is the only disorder the individual has) in 70% of cases. The remaining 30% of the time Duane syndrome occurs in association with malformations of the skeleton, ears, eyes, kidneys and nervous system and as a component of Okihiro syndrome (an association of Duane syndrome with forearm malformation and hearing loss), Wildervanck syndrome (fusion of neck vertebrae and hearing loss), Holt-Oram syndrome (abnormalities of the upper limbs and heart), Morning Glory syndrome (abnormalities of the optic disc or "blind spot"), and Goldenhar syndrome (malformation of the jaw, cheek and ear, usually on one side of the face).
Clinically, Duane syndrome is often subdivided into three types:
Duane syndrome is due to a miswiring of the medial and the lateral rectus muscles, the muscles that move the eyes. Also, patients with the syndrome lack the abducens nerve, the sixth cranial nerve, which is involved in eye movement. Genetic and environmental factors are believed to play a role in Duane syndrome. The syndrome can be inherited as an autosomal dominant or recessive trait. Genes involved in the development of Duane syndrome are located on chromosomes 2q13 and 8q13.
Other names for Duane syndrome include: congenital retraction syndrome, Duane retraction syndrome, eye retraction syndrome, retraction syndrome, and Stilling-Turk-Duane syndrome.
The 6 muscles that control the movement of the eye are attached to the outside of the wall of the eye.
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Clinical Diagnosis. Duane syndrome, a congenital, non-progressive eye movement disorder, is characterized by the following: Congenital limitation of abduction and/or adduction
Duane syndrome: A congenital eye movement disorder in which there is miswiring of the eye muscles, causing some eye muscles to contract when they should not and other eye ...