Correct Answer: D. Maddox rod
The Maddox rod is a cylindrical lens instrument used in orthoptic examination to dissociate the visual axes and measure heterophoria (latent deviation). It consists of a series of parallel cylindrical lenses mounted in a trial frame. When placed before one eye, it converts a point light source into a linear image (streak), allowing the examiner to assess the deviation of the non-fixating eye independently. This dissociation is critical in Indian clinical practice for detecting and quantifying phorias that would otherwise remain masked by fusion. The Maddox rod is the gold standard for measuring horizontal and vertical heterophoria in routine ophthalmic screening, particularly in pediatric vision assessment and pre-operative strabismus evaluation. The linear image produced helps isolate each eye's motor response without binocular fusion compensation.
Why the other options are wrong
A. Maddox glass — Maddox glass (or Maddox double prism) is used to measure heterotropia (manifest deviation), not heterophoria. It produces two images and is employed in the cover test setup, not for isolated phoria measurement. This is a trap because both are Maddox instruments, but they serve different clinical purposes in strabismus assessment. B. Phoropter — A phoropter is a comprehensive refraction instrument containing multiple lenses, prisms, and apertures for objective and subjective refraction. While it may include Maddox lenses as accessories, it is not the specific instrument for phoria measurement. NBE may confuse students who think of it as the primary orthoptic tool. C. Maddox wing — The Maddox wing is a portable dissociation device used for measuring near heterophoria at 33 cm distance, featuring a hinged design with targets and prisms. The Maddox rod measures distance heterophoria. Confusing these two is a common error in Indian ophthalmology exams, as both assess phorias but at different working distances.
High-Yield Facts
- Maddox rod produces a linear streak image when placed before one eye, dissociating binocular vision for phoria measurement.
- Heterophoria (latent deviation) is measured using Maddox rod; heterotropia (manifest deviation) is assessed with cover test and Maddox glass.
- Maddox rod measures distance heterophoria (typically at 6 meters); Maddox wing measures near heterophoria (at 33 cm).
- The cylindrical lens design of Maddox rod converts point light into a perpendicular linear image, enabling monocular fixation assessment.
- Normal heterophoria in Indian population: up to 4 prism diopters esophoria or 8 prism diopters exophoria at distance.
Mnemonics
ROD vs WING ROD = Remote (distance), One linear image, Dissociation tool. WING = Work at near, Integrated targets, Near heterophoria, Good for near vision. Maddox Instruments Rod (distance phoria) → Rod is for Remote. Wing (near phoria) → Wing is for Working distance. Glass (tropia) → Glass shows Gross deviation.
NBE Trap
NBE pairs Maddox rod, wing, and glass together to test whether students understand the specific clinical application of each instrument. The trap is assuming all Maddox instruments measure the same parameter—students must distinguish between distance vs. near measurement and phoria vs. tropia assessment.
Clinical Pearl
In Indian pediatric vision screening camps, the Maddox rod is invaluable for detecting latent strabismus in children before it manifests as amblyopia. A child with significant esophoria detected early can be managed with glasses or orthoptic exercises, preventing permanent vision loss—a critical public health intervention in resource-limited settings.
_Reference: Bailey & Love's Short Practice of Surgery (Ophthalmology section); Park's Textbook of Preventive and Social Medicine (Vision screening); Parson's Diseases of the Eye (Chapter on Strabismus and Orthoptics)_