Strabismus surgeons continually seek to achieve the best results from their surgery, which means stable motor alignment and sensory improvement with a minimum number of procedures(1). But the tables and algorithms that we employ for the number of muscles to be included in the surgery, and for the doses of surgery, are often not appropriate for difficult or unpredictable cases(2). The ability to modify the site of the muscle insertion on the globe to refine surgical results and to control postoperative deviations led Arthur Jampolsky to reintroduce an adjustable suture technique, almost four decades ago, based on the ideas of Bielschowsky, O'Connor, and Harms(3-6). Common indications for adjustable sutures include paralysis, restrictive strabismus, and reoperations. A few surgeons use them in practically all cases, in children as well as in adults(7).
Although the adjustable suture technique has been used for over 30 years, and there is a large volume of literature on the subject, randomized controlled trials have not been done(8). Strabismus surgeons tend to be sharply polarized regarding their attitude toward adjustable sutures; they either love them and employ them often, as we do, or hate them and never employ them, claiming that equivalent results can be easily obtained without their use.
Proponents of adjustable sutures cite better results, less stress, and better patient and surgeon confidence and satisfaction. Detractors of adjustable sutures cite equivalent results, more stress, extra time involved, higher cost, and patient discomfort. The different stress levels undoubtedly reflect different familiarity and experience with those advanced techniques that ease the stress of the surgeons skilled in these techniques. It is no surprise that lack of knowledge or experience with a technique leads to skepticism and even hostility, as witnessed in the early days of phacoemulsification for cataract surgery. From our teaching experience, confidence and success with adjustable sutures is only achieved after months of apprenticeship. One should not expect strabismus surgeons who are used to fixed-suture techniques to take the time and effort to become proficient with adjustable sutures - therefore the polarization in attitudes.
It will be difficult to do a randomized clinical trial of adjustable sutures in strabismus surgery because only surgeons well-experienced and comfortable with adjustable suture surgery would be deemed appropriate to participate by the adjustable suture community, and those surgeons are generally too wedded to their fine-tuned adjustable techniques to abandon them for any patient randomized to fixed-suture surgery.
From the patients' point of view, a long-term follow-up study of results and patient satisfaction was conducted in 2013 in Bonn, Germany, of 113 patients after difficult strabismus surgery using adjustable sutures(9). From the questionnaires they completed, 89.4% had no problems or did not remember the adjustment or tying off procedure. After an average period of 11 years, the satisfaction was high, and reoperation rate was 7%.
We are firmly committed to our use of adjustable sutures in strabismus surgery, but we do not advocate them for all strabismus surgeons. We encourage those with reservations to take the time and effort to learn the best techniques, by observing those who use them routinely. Better yet is to train with those surgeons; simple observation may not be enough. Adjustable sutures make sense, to us and to our patients. We believe that increasingly better adjustable suture techniques will slowly become the standard of care in the future, probably taking generations rather than years.