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Convergence Insufficiency

  • Symptoms of eye strain, double vision with near work, headaches, astenopia worse with prolonged near work
  • Common accompanying signs:
    • exophoria greater at near than distance
    • decreased or absent fusional convergence
    • normal divergence
    • Low AC/A
    • accommodative insufficiency
  • Uncommon accompanying signs:
    • orthophoria
    • esophoria at near
  • Point at which a person can no longer hold convergence at near
  • Testing procedure
    • Proper correction should be worn
    • Use accommodative target (20/40 image or similar)
    • Patient focuses the target that slowly moves towards the nose
    • Where diplopia occurs is the “break point”
  • >6 cm from the nose in non-presbyopes and >10 cm for presbyopes is probably abnormal
  • Testing procedure
    • Should be wearing proper correction
    • Measure with base out prism on distance (6 m) then near target (1/3 m)
    • Use accommodative target 20/40 or similar
    • Move the prism bar to the point where patient can no longer maintain single vision on the object, this is the break point.
    • Before reaching the break point, the patient may note a point where the image blurs, the patient can no longer use fusional convergence and resorts to accommodative convergence which may improve convergence but causes a blurred image due to over-convergence
    • Reduce the base out prism until the patient recovers single vision, this is the recovery point.
    • if exotropia present ensure not worse XT in downgaze
    • encouragement often improves convergence
Convergence Amplitudes reported by Several Authors
Prism Diopters Parks (1976) Duane (1933) Fray (2017) Ferrari (2019)
Near
Break Point 20-25 38-51 35 45
Recovery Point 18-22 40
Distance
Break Point 15 26 25
Recovery Point 12 20

Most studies would include patients with ≤ 15 PD break point

  • Low AC/A ratio of <2:1
  • <15PD
  • High CI symptom survey score of ≥16

Forced response to each question is “Never”, “Infrequently”, “Sometimes”, “Fairly Often”, “Always”

  1. Do your eyes feel tired when reading or doing close work?
  2. Do your eyes feel uncomfortable when reading or doing close work?
  3. Do you have headaches when reading or doing close work?
  4. Do you feel sleepy when reading or doing close work?
  5. Do you lose concentration when reading or doing close work?
  6. Do you have trouble remembering what you have read?
  7. Do you have double vision when reading or doing close work?
  8. Do you see the words move, jump, swim or appear to float on the page when reading or doing close work?
  9. Do you feel like you read slowly?
  10. Do your eyes ever hurt when reading or doing close work?
  11. Do your eyes ever feel sore when reading or doing close work?
  12. Do you feel a “pulling” feeling around your eyes when reading or doing close work?
  13. Do you notice the words blurring or coming in and out of focus when reading or doing close work?
  14. Do you lose your place while reading or doing close work?
  15. Do you have to re-read the same line of words when reading?

Developed by the Convergence Insufficiency Treatment Trial Investigator Group - Borsting EJ, Rouse MW, Mitchell GL, et al. Validity and reliability of the revised convergence insufficiency symptom survey in children aged 9 to 18 years. Optom Vis Sci. 2003;80(12):832-838. doi:10.1097/00006324-200312000-00014