## Correct Answer: D. Cover uncover test The cover-uncover test (also called the cover test) is the gold-standard clinical examination for detecting and quantifying heterophoria and heterotropia in squint assessment. The test works by occluding one eye while observing the movement of the uncovered eye. When the covered eye is suddenly uncovered, any movement of that eye indicates a latent or manifest deviation. The diagram shows the classic notation "dde" (right eye covered) and "La d" (left eye covered, with "La" indicating left eye and "d" indicating deviation), which is the standard documentation format used in Indian ophthalmology clinics. This test is performed at both distance (6 meters) and near (33 cm) to assess the AC/A ratio and differentiate between accommodative and non-accommodative components of strabismus. The cover-uncover test is essential in every squint clinic in India for baseline assessment before any surgical or medical intervention, making it the most frequently used and clinically relevant test for heterophoria detection. ## Why the other options are wrong **A. Prism test** — The prism test (prism cover test) is a *refinement* of the cover-uncover test used to *quantify* the magnitude of deviation in prism diopters, not to identify the presence of deviation itself. It requires prisms and is a secondary test performed *after* the cover-uncover test has already identified the deviation. The diagram shows no prisms, making this incorrect. **B. Maddox rod test** — The Maddox rod test is used to detect and measure *cyclophoria* (torsional deviation) and *heterophoria* in specific planes using a specialized optical device that converts a point light source into a line. It requires the Maddox rod apparatus and is not the basic screening test shown. The simple notation in the diagram does not match Maddox rod documentation. **C. Obscure test** — This is a non-existent or irrelevant option in standard ophthalmology nomenclature. There is no recognized clinical test called the 'obscure test' in squint assessment. This is likely an NBE distractor to test whether students can identify legitimate clinical tests from fabricated ones. ## High-Yield Facts - **Cover-uncover test** is the first-line screening test for detecting heterophoria and heterotropia in all squint patients. - **Performed at distance (6 m) and near (33 cm)** to assess accommodation-convergence relationship and AC/A ratio. - **Movement of the uncovered eye** when the other eye is uncovered indicates the presence and direction of latent or manifest deviation. - **Standard notation** in Indian clinics: 'dde' = right eye covered, 'La d' = left eye covered with deviation noted. - **Differentiates heterophoria from heterotropia**: phoria = latent (only appears on cover), tropia = manifest (visible without cover). - **No equipment required** — making it the most practical and universally applicable test in resource-limited Indian primary health centers. ## Mnemonics **CUT for Squint** **C**over one eye → **U**ncover and observe → **T**ell the direction of movement. If eye moves to take fixation, there was a deviation. **Distance vs Near Rule** Always test **at 6 meters (distance) first**, then **at 33 cm (near)**. Difference tells you if it's accommodative (worse at near) or non-accommodative (same at both). ## NBE Trap NBE pairs the cover-uncover test with prism test to trap students who confuse the *basic screening test* (cover-uncover) with the *quantification test* (prism cover test). Students may incorrectly choose prism test if they think the diagram is showing measurement rather than detection. ## Clinical Pearl In Indian primary health centers and school screening camps, the cover-uncover test is the only squint detection tool available — no equipment, no cost, 100% sensitivity for manifest deviations. Every ASHA worker trained in vision screening uses this test to refer suspected squint cases to district eye hospitals. _Reference: Bailey & Love Ch. 35 (Strabismus); Park's Textbook of Preventive and Social Medicine (Squint screening); Harrison Ch. 423 (Neuro-ophthalmology)_
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