When one or more of the muscles that move the eye stop working properly, the eye can no longer follow the direction it is supposed to. This is called a paralytic squint. Unlike the more familiar squint seen in children, a paralytic squint usually develops suddenly in adults and is almost always caused by an underlying health condition such as diabetes, high blood pressure, or a problem with the nerves controlling the eye.
Think of the eye as being held in position by six muscles, all working together like a balanced set of ropes. Each muscle pulls the eye in a specific direction, and when all six are working properly, the eye moves smoothly in any direction you want. In a paralytic squint, one of those muscles weakens or stops working, and the remaining muscles pull the eye off to one side without opposition.
The key thing that sets a paralytic squint apart from other types of squint is this: the misalignment changes depending on which direction the person is looking. When the person tries to look in the direction controlled by the paralysed muscle, the squint gets worse and the double vision becomes more pronounced. This is a distinctive feature that helps doctors identify and classify the condition.
Paralytic squint can affect people of any age, but it is far more commonly seen in adults than in children. In India, where diabetes and hypertension affect large numbers of people, paralytic squint related to these conditions is a frequent presentation in eye clinics.
The paralytic squint symptoms are usually quite distinctive, particularly because of the sudden onset of double vision in most adult cases. The paralytic squint symptoms tend to appear quickly, sometimes literally overnight, which is what prompts people to seek care urgently.
| Symptom | What it feels like |
�� | Double vision (diplopia) | Seeing two images of the same object, particularly when looking in a specific direction |
↔️ | Misaligned eye | One eye appears to be drifting outward, inward, up, or down compared to the other |
�� | Limited eye movement | The affected eye cannot move fully in the direction controlled by the weakened muscle |
�� | Dizziness or vertigo | A spinning or unsteady feeling, particularly when looking in the direction of the paralysed muscle |
↙️ | Compensatory head tilt or turn | Turning or tilting the head to reduce the double vision and find a position of single vision |
�� | Eye strain and headache | The effort of trying to fuse the two images causes strain, which can result in headaches |
�� | Drooping eyelid | In paralysis of the third nerve, the upper eyelid may also droop (ptosis) |
Please visit an eye specialist urgently if:
• You develop sudden double vision with no obvious explanation
• One eye appears to be drifting out of alignment that was not present before
• You notice a drooping upper eyelid alongside eye misalignment
• The double vision appeared after a head injury or a health episode
• You have diabetes or high blood pressure and develop any of the above symptoms
• Double vision is accompanied by headache, facial pain, or weakness on one side of the body
A sudden paralytic squint with additional neurological symptoms such as facial weakness, difficulty speaking, or arm or leg weakness should be treated as a medical emergency.
Understanding the types of paralytic squint helps the doctor identify the cause and plan the right paralytic squint treatment. The different paralytic squint types are classified according to which nerve supplying the eye muscles is affected. There are three cranial nerves that control eye movement, and damage or weakness in any one of them produces a distinct pattern of misalignment and restricted movement.
The paralytic squint causes are varied but all involve damage to the nerves or muscles that control eye movement. Understanding paralytic squint causes is important because in many cases, treating the underlying condition is the first step in management. The paralytic squint causes in adults are almost always a medical condition affecting the blood supply or structure of the nerves.
Diabetes: Diabetes is the single most common cause of paralytic squint in India. High blood sugar over a long period damages the tiny blood vessels that supply the cranial nerves controlling eye movement. When the blood supply to a nerve is compromised, the nerve stops working as it should. This is called a microvascular cranial nerve palsy. The sixth and third nerves are most commonly affected. Importantly, in diabetes-related third nerve palsy, the pupil is typically spared, which helps doctors distinguish it from an aneurysm.
High blood pressure (Hypertension): Like diabetes, poorly controlled blood pressure can damage the small vessels supplying the cranial nerves. It is often a contributing factor alongside diabetes.
Stroke or TIA: A stroke affecting the brainstem or the areas near the cranial nerve pathways can cause a paralytic squint. Any new squint appearing alongside other stroke symptoms such as facial drooping, arm weakness, or speech difficulty must be evaluated as a neurological emergency.
Head injury or trauma: A blow to the head, a road traffic accident, or a fall can directly damage one of the cranial nerves, particularly the fourth nerve, which runs a long course through the skull and is vulnerable to trauma.
Brain tumours or aneurysm: Pressure on a cranial nerve from a growing tumour or a blood vessel aneurysm can cause a paralytic squint. A third nerve palsy with a fixed, dilated pupil is a warning sign for an aneurysm and requires immediate imaging.
Inflammatory and demyelinating conditions: Conditions like multiple sclerosis, which affects the myelin sheath surrounding nerves, can cause episodes of paralytic squint as part of broader neurological involvement.
Myasthenia gravis: This is a condition where the connection between the nerve and muscle is affected, causing variable weakness in the eye muscles. It is one cause of paralytic squint that does not involve the nerves themselves but mimics a cranial nerve palsy.
Thyroid eye disease: An overactive or underactive thyroid can cause swelling and stiffening of the eye muscles, restricting their movement and causing a squint that resembles paralytic squint.
Diagnosing a paralytic squint involves identifying which nerve and muscle are affected, measuring the degree of misalignment, and then investigating the underlying cause through appropriate tests. This typically involves both an eye specialist and, depending on the findings, a physician or neurologist.
Test | What it assesses |
Eye movement assessment | Checks which direction the eye cannot move fully, identifying the affected muscle and nerve |
Cover test and prism measurement | Measures the angle of the squint at different gaze positions, confirming the diagnosis |
Hess chart | A specialised test that maps the movement of each eye in all directions and shows clearly which muscle is underperforming |
Visual field testing | Assesses whether peripheral vision is affected |
Pupil examination | A dilated or non-reactive pupil in third nerve palsy can point to a serious underlying cause |
Blood tests | Checks blood sugar, blood pressure, thyroid function, and inflammatory markers |
MRI or CT scan of the brain | Done when a structural cause such as an aneurysm, tumour, or stroke is suspected |
Anti-acetylcholine receptor antibodies | A blood test to check for myasthenia gravis if the squint is variable or unusual |
Paralytic squint treatment is planned around the nerve affected, the underlying cause, how long the condition has been present, and whether the nerve damage is likely to recover on its own. In many cases, paralytic squint treatment is a step-by-step process rather than a single intervention.
The most important principle in paralytic squint treatment is that the underlying cause must be addressed alongside any direct management of the squint. In many cases of paralytic squint caused by diabetes or hypertension, the nerve recovers naturally over a period of three to six months once the underlying condition is controlled. This means that paralytic squint treatment in these cases begins with medical management of the underlying cause, alongside measures to manage the double vision in the meantime.
Treating the Underlying Cause: First step in all cases
This is always the foundation of paralytic squint treatment. If diabetes is responsible, bringing blood sugar under control is essential. If hypertension is involved, blood pressure management is started. If a stroke has occurred, appropriate neurological care is initiated. For aneurysm or tumour, neurosurgical intervention may be needed. Without addressing the cause, other paralytic squint treatment options have limited effectiveness in the long term.
Observation and Waiting: For microvascular palsies
When paralytic squint is caused by diabetes or high blood pressure, many cases resolve on their own as the nerve heals over weeks to months. In these cases, the most appropriate paralytic squint treatment in the early phase is observation, combined with management of the underlying medical condition. The doctor will review the patient at regular intervals to track improvement.
Prism Glasses: Managing double vision without surgery
Prism lenses in glasses can shift the image from the misaligned eye so that both images fall on the same point, eliminating the double vision. This is a non-surgical paralytic squint treatment that provides immediate relief during the period of observation and recovery. Prisms can be added as a temporary stick-on to existing glasses, allowing easy adjustment as the squint changes over time.
Occlusion (Eye Patching): Simple, immediate relief
Covering one eye with a patch or an opaque lens eliminates double vision immediately by blocking the image from one eye. This is often used as a short-term paralytic squint treatment while waiting for the nerve to recover or while other treatment options are being planned. It is simple, low-cost, and effective for symptom relief.
Botulinum Toxin Injection (Botox): For specific cases
Botulinum toxin can be injected into the overacting opposing muscle, temporarily weakening it and allowing the eyes to come back into better alignment. This paralytic squint treatment is particularly useful in the early phase of sixth nerve palsy, where the medial rectus (the muscle pulling the eye inward) becomes overactive as a result of the lateral rectus paralysis. It provides temporary realignment while the nerve recovers and can prevent the development of secondary contracture of the opposing muscle.
Surgery: When recovery is incomplete
If the nerve does not fully recover after six to twelve months, and residual double vision or misalignment remains, surgical paralytic squint treatment may be considered. Surgery involves repositioning the eye muscles to bring the eyes back into alignment for the most important gaze positions, typically straight ahead and reading position. The goal of surgical paralytic squint treatment is not to fully restore muscle function but to give the person comfortable, single vision in their everyday line of sight. In some cases, more than one surgery may be needed.
Vision Rehabilitation: Supporting recovery
For patients with persistent double vision or reduced vision in the affected eye, vision rehabilitation services can help. This includes exercises to support the recovering nerve, advice on managing daily tasks, and coordination with occupational therapy where needed.
India carries one of the largest burdens of diabetes in the world, with tens of millions of people living with the condition. Diabetic cranial nerve palsy, the type of paralytic squint directly caused by diabetes, is therefore a particularly common presentation in Indian eye clinics.
The mechanism is straightforward. Prolonged high blood sugar damages the capillaries, the tiny blood vessels that supply the nerves. When the blood supply to a cranial nerve is interrupted, the nerve stops functioning correctly and the muscle it controls becomes weak. This typically causes a sudden paralytic squint with double vision.
The good news is that diabetic cranial nerve palsies have a relatively favourable outlook compared to structural causes. Most cases improve significantly over three to six months once blood sugar is brought under good control, and full recovery is common. The paralytic squint treatment in these cases primarily involves managing the diabetes properly and providing symptomatic relief with prisms or patching during the recovery period.
If you have diabetes and develop sudden double vision or a change in eye alignment, please do not delay seeking an assessment. This is a recognised complication that can be managed well when addressed promptly.
One of the investigations commonly done for paralytic squint is a Hess chart. Many patients who are referred for this test are not sure what it involves, so here is a simple explanation.
A Hess chart is a painless, non-invasive test that maps the movement of each eye separately in all nine standard positions of gaze. The patient wears a pair of red and green glasses and looks at a screen with lights, identifying each light with a pointer. Because the glasses separate what each eye sees, the machine can record the movement range of each eye independently.
The resulting chart shows clearly which muscle is underperforming and which opposing muscle is overacting in compensation. This visual map is one of the most reliable tools for confirming the type of paralytic squint, monitoring improvement over time, and planning surgical treatment for paralytic squint if recovery is incomplete.
This is one of the most commonly asked questions and it is worth explaining clearly.
| Feature | Paralytic squint | Non-paralytic (concomitant) squint |
| Cause | Nerve or muscle weakness | Brain direction issue, muscles intact |
| Age of onset | Mostly adults | Mostly children |
| Double vision | Yes, usually prominent | Rarely in adults, suppressed in children |
| Angle of squint | Changes with gaze direction | Same in all gaze directions |
| Head posture | Often tilted or turned | May be present but less pronounced |
| Underlying health condition | Usually yes | Not typically |
| Main treatment focus | Treat cause, then manage squint | Glasses, patching, surgery |
Paralytic squint is a condition that sits at the crossroads of eye care and general medicine. It requires an ophthalmologist who can assess the eye and the nerve involvement, and coordinate with a physician or neurologist to investigate and manage the underlying cause.
At Vasan Eye Care, our ophthalmologists are trained to assess all types of squint, including paralytic squint, and to guide patients through the full process from diagnosis to recovery. When you visit us for paralytic squint, here is what you can expect:
| Word or phrase | What it means in simple terms |
| Paralytic squint | A squint caused by weakness or paralysis of one or more eye muscles |
| Cranial nerve | A nerve originating from the brain that controls eye movement |
| Third nerve palsy | Weakness of the third cranial nerve, affecting most eye muscles and the eyelid |
| Fourth nerve palsy | Weakness of the fourth cranial nerve, causing a subtle vertical squint and head tilt |
| Sixth nerve palsy | Weakness of the sixth cranial nerve, causing the eye to turn inward |
| Diplopia | The medical term for double vision |
| Prism glasses | Special glasses that redirect the image to eliminate double vision |
| Hess chart | A diagnostic test that maps the range of movement of each eye separately |
| Botulinum toxin (Botox) | An injection that temporarily weakens an overacting muscle to help realign the eye |
| Microvascular palsy | Nerve damage caused by reduced blood supply, typically from diabetes or hypertension |
• Non-paralytic (Concomitant) Squint
• Double Vision (Diplopia)
• Diabetic Eye Disease
• Thyroid Eye Disease
• Ptosis (Drooping Eyelid)
Agarwal A, et al. Paralytic Squint: Symptoms, Causes and Treatment. Dr Agarwal’s Eye Hospital. https://www.dragarwal.com/diseases-conditions/squint/paralytic-squint/
Rowe FJ, et al. Paralytic strabismus: a 3-year prospective study of ocular motility. Eye (British Journal of Ophthalmology). 2009. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/11734680/
Scott AB. Strabismus surgery in the treatment of paralytic strabismus. Current Opinion in Ophthalmology. 2001;12(6):419-423. https://journals.lww.com/co-ophthalmology/fulltext/2001/12000/strabismus_surgery_in_the_treatment_of_paralytic.5.aspx
Sharma P, Gogoi M. Advances in managing paralytic strabismus: a look toward the future. Access Health. https://accessh.org/from-chairs-desk/advances-in-managing-paralytic-strabismus-a-look-toward-the-future/
Nethradhama Super Speciality Eye Hospital. Paralytic Squint: Causes, Symptoms and How to Treat It. https://nethradhama.org/blog/paralytic-squint/
For appointments, call 1800 571 2222 or visit your nearest Vasan Eye Care centre.
Paralytic squint treatment always starts with identifying and managing the underlying cause, whether that is diabetes, high blood pressure, a stroke, or another condition. For cases caused by a microvascular problem (as in diabetes), many patients recover on their own over three to six months with good medical control. During this time, double vision is managed using prism glasses or eye patching. If full recovery does not occur, Botox injections or surgery may be used to improve alignment and reduce double vision. The overall paralytic squint treatment is highly individualised.
Paralytic squint itself is not dangerous in the way a fracture or infection is, but it is often a sign of something else in the body that needs attention. A third nerve palsy with a dilated pupil is a warning sign for a cerebral aneurysm and should be treated as urgent. Any sudden paralytic squint with associated neurological symptoms, such as facial weakness, difficulty speaking, or loss of limb movement, is a medical emergency. For cases where the cause is diabetes or blood pressure, the condition itself is manageable and usually resolves, but it is a signal that these underlying conditions need better control.
The key difference lies in the cause and the behaviour of the squint. In a non-paralytic squint (also called concomitant squint), the eye muscles are intact and working, but the brain is not directing both eyes to the same point. The angle of misalignment stays the same in all directions of gaze. In a paralytic squint, one or more eye muscles are weakened or not working at all because of nerve damage. The angle of misalignment changes depending on which direction the person looks, and is worst when looking in the direction controlled by the affected muscle. Non-paralytic squint is more common in children. Paralytic squint is more common in adults and is usually caused by an underlying health condition.
The right squint treatment depends entirely on the type of squint. For common childhood squint, glasses, patching, and surgery are the typical steps. For paralytic squint in adults, the priority is identifying the underlying cause, followed by prism glasses, Botox injections, or eye muscle surgery depending on whether recovery has occurred. A thorough examination by an eye specialist is always the necessary first step to determine which approach is appropriate for each individual.
In cases where the underlying cause is a microvascular problem, such as when diabetes or hypertension has temporarily compromised the blood supply to a cranial nerve, the nerve can recover over a period of three to six months once the medical condition is controlled. However, this recovery is not certain and not every case resolves completely on its own. Without any paralytic squint treatment, the double vision persists and in some cases the opposing muscles can develop tightness over time, making later surgical correction more difficult. Early assessment and appropriate management give the strongest chance of a good outcome.
This depends on the cause. For microvascular palsies due to diabetes or hypertension, most cases show significant improvement within three to six months, with some taking up to a year. Traumatic nerve palsies can take longer. Cases caused by structural damage such as tumour or aneurysm depend on whether the underlying cause has been successfully treated. During recovery, paralytic squint treatment focuses on managing symptoms through prisms or patching, and the doctor reviews progress regularly. If there has been no improvement after six to twelve months, surgical paralytic squint treatment may be discussed.
Yes, although it is far less common in children than in adults. In children, paralytic squint can be congenital (present from birth) or acquired. Congenital fourth nerve palsy is seen in children and is often identified by a persistent head tilt. Acquired paralytic squint in children needs investigation to rule out a serious underlying cause, such as a brain tumour, raised intracranial pressure, or infection. Any new squint in a child, particularly one with double vision or head tilt, should be evaluated promptly.
The most common paralytic squint causes in India are diabetes and high blood pressure, both of which damage the tiny blood vessels supplying the cranial nerves that control eye movement. Other paralytic squint causes include stroke, head injury, brain tumours, aneurysm, and inflammatory conditions like multiple sclerosis. In some cases, the cause is not found despite thorough investigation, though this is less common. Because the causes of paralytic squint are often systemic health conditions, a general medical evaluation is usually done alongside the eye assessment.