# Effects of strabismus surgery on choroidal blood flow: a systematic review and meta-analysis

**Authors:** Sahel Khazaei, Zahra Moravej, Mehrdad Motamed Shariati

PMC · DOI: 10.1186/s40942-026-00818-1 · International Journal of Retina and Vitreous · 2026-02-23

## TL;DR

This study reviews and analyzes the effects of strabismus surgery on choroidal blood flow and finds no consistent changes in key metrics.

## Contribution

The paper provides the first systematic review and meta-analysis on choroidal changes after strabismus surgery.

## Key findings

- No significant overall change in subfoveal choroidal thickness after strabismus surgery.
- Choroidal vascularity index and choriocapillaris vessel density showed no significant pooled changes.
- Meta-regression found no associations with follow-up duration or surgical procedure.

## Abstract

Strabismus surgery may affect choroidal circulation, with potential implications for outer retinal nourishment and visual function. We conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis to quantify postoperative changes in subfoveal choroidal thickness and vascularity parameters following strabismus surgery.

A systematic search was conducted in PubMed, Scopus, and Web of Science. After two-stage title/abstract and full-text screening, eligible observational studies reporting pre- and postoperative optical coherence tomography (OCT) or OCT angiography (OCTA) choroidal measures were included. Random-effects meta-analyses estimated pooled mean differences for subfoveal choroidal thickness (SFCT), choroidal vascularity index (CVI), foveal choriocapillaris vessel density (VD), and choriocapillaris flow. Subgroup analyses, meta-regression, quality assessment using the Risk Of Bias In Non-randomized Studies of Interventions (ROBINS-I) tool, and evaluation of publication bias were performed.

Eighteen studies met the inclusion criteria. Pooled analysis of 22 groups (14 studies) showed no significant overall change in SFCT after strabismus surgery (mean difference − 1.13 μm; 95% CI − 6.93 to 4.67; p = 0.70; I2 = 52.1%). CVI (seven groups, five studies) showed no significant change (pooled mean change 0.001; 95% CI − 0.006 to 0.008; p = 0.70; I2 = 0.04%). Foveal choriocapillaris VD and flow showed no significant pooled changes, though choriocapillaris VD exhibited substantial heterogeneity (I2 = 87.9%). Meta-regression detected no associations with follow-up duration, surgical procedure, or number of muscles. No clear publication bias was observed.

Current observational evidence suggests no consistent alterations in SFCT, CVI, or choriocapillaris vascularity metrics during the intermediate postoperative period following strabismus surgeries.

The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1186/s40942-026-00818-1.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** strabismus (MONDO:0003432)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** strabismus (MESH:D013285)

## Full text

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## Figures

5 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13041447/full.md

## References

9 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13041447/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13041447