What are the symptoms of intermittent exotropia?

  Intermittent exotropia is a type of strabismus between exotropia and common exotropia. It is a strabismus in which the visual axes are often separated, initially occurring when looking at a distance, and when looking at a distance, the fused scattering amplitude exceeds the fused total collection amplitude, which produces exotropia, and intermittent exotropia is preceded by exotropia. Intermittent exotropia is an eye disease that is easily overlooked. With the exception of a few cases, exotropia begins with an unobtrusive exotropia and progresses with age to an intermittent and constant exotropia with a distinct appearance. So what are the specific symptoms of intermittent exotropia? Let’s listen to the introduction of Fuzhou Eye Hospital experts.  Symptoms of intermittent exotropia: People with strabismus often complain of visual fatigue, blurred vision, headache, double vision, and inability to read for long periods of time. Another symptom is photophobia, the patient is often afraid of light and close one eye, this is because in bright places or when looking far away easily appear exotropia relationship, in intermittent exotropia is very high incidence.  Another rare symptom in people with intermittent exotropia is small vision, known as microphthalmia. In children with intermittent or constant exotropia, there are few symptoms in the early stages of the disease, but in adults, there is a tendency for the eyes to deviate to the outside, or to exotropia at will. In exotropia, the visual function of both eyes is destroyed, depth perception is reduced, there is no sense of distance, and it is easy to take the wrong steps and tailgate when driving a car. When trying to maintain an upright position, it is difficult to see things, and as a result, it is difficult to see things with both eyes and only with one eye, and there is no fine stereo vision, and the eye position is skewed.