Impaired fixation suppression of horizontal vestibular nystagmus during smooth pursuit: pathophysiology and clinical implications.
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BORIS DOI
Date of Publication
August 2021
Publication Type
Article
Division/Institute
Contributor
Zee, David S | |
Subject(s)
Series
European journal of neurology
ISSN or ISBN (if monograph)
1468-1331
Publisher
Wiley
Language
English
Publisher DOI
PubMed ID
33983645
Uncontrolled Keywords
Description
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE
A peripheral spontaneous nystagmus (SN) is typically enhanced or revealed by removing fixation. Conversely, failure of fixation suppression of SN is usually a sign of a central disorder. Based on Luebke and Robinson (Vision Res 1988, vol. 28 (8), pp. 941-946), who suggested that the normal fixation mechanism is disengaged during pursuit, it is hypothesized that vertical tracking in the light would bring out or enhance a horizontal SN.
METHODS
Eighteen patients with acute vestibular neuritis were studied. Eye movements were recorded using video-oculography at straight-ahead gaze with and without visual fixation, and during smooth pursuit. The slow-phase velocity and the fixation suppression indices of nystagmus (relative to SN in darkness) were compared in each condition.
RESULTS
During vertical tracking, the slow-phase velocity of horizontal SN with eyes near straight-ahead gaze was significantly higher (median 2.7°/s) than under static visual fixation (median 1.2°/s). Likewise, the fixation index was significantly higher (worse suppression) during pursuit (median 48%) than during fixation (median 26%). A release of SN was also suggested during horizontal pursuit, if one assumes superposition of SN on a normal and symmetrical pursuit capability.
A peripheral spontaneous nystagmus (SN) is typically enhanced or revealed by removing fixation. Conversely, failure of fixation suppression of SN is usually a sign of a central disorder. Based on Luebke and Robinson (Vision Res 1988, vol. 28 (8), pp. 941-946), who suggested that the normal fixation mechanism is disengaged during pursuit, it is hypothesized that vertical tracking in the light would bring out or enhance a horizontal SN.
METHODS
Eighteen patients with acute vestibular neuritis were studied. Eye movements were recorded using video-oculography at straight-ahead gaze with and without visual fixation, and during smooth pursuit. The slow-phase velocity and the fixation suppression indices of nystagmus (relative to SN in darkness) were compared in each condition.
RESULTS
During vertical tracking, the slow-phase velocity of horizontal SN with eyes near straight-ahead gaze was significantly higher (median 2.7°/s) than under static visual fixation (median 1.2°/s). Likewise, the fixation index was significantly higher (worse suppression) during pursuit (median 48%) than during fixation (median 26%). A release of SN was also suggested during horizontal pursuit, if one assumes superposition of SN on a normal and symmetrical pursuit capability.
File(s)
| File | File Type | Format | Size | License | Publisher/Copright statement | Content | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ene.14909.pdf | text | Adobe PDF | 490.52 KB | Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0) | published |