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October 07, 2008; 71 (15) Articles

Diagnosing disconjugate eye movements

Phase-plane analysis of horizontal saccades

Alessandro Serra, Ke Liao, Manuela Matta, R. John Leigh
First published October 6, 2008, DOI: https://doi.org/10.1212/01.wnl.0000327525.72168.57
Alessandro Serra
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Ke Liao
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Manuela Matta
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R. John Leigh
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Citation
Diagnosing disconjugate eye movements
Phase-plane analysis of horizontal saccades
Alessandro Serra, Ke Liao, Manuela Matta, R. John Leigh
Neurology Oct 2008, 71 (15) 1167-1175; DOI: 10.1212/01.wnl.0000327525.72168.57

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Abstract

Background: Saccades are fast eye movements that conjugately shift the point of fixation between distant features of interest in the visual environment. Several disorders, affecting sites from brainstem to extraocular muscle, may cause horizontal saccades to become disconjugate. Prior techniques for detection of saccadic disconjugacy, especially in internuclear ophthalmoparesis (INO), have compared only one point in abducting vs adducting saccades, such as peak velocity.

Methods: We applied a phase-plane technique that compared each eye’s velocity as a function of change in position (normalized displacement) in 22 patients with disease variously affecting the brainstem reticular formation, the abducens nucleus, the medial longitudinal fasciculus, the oculomotor nerve, the abducens nerve, the neuromuscular junction, or the extraocular muscles; 10 age-matched subjects served as controls.

Results: We found three different patterns of disconjugacy throughout the course of horizontal saccades: early abnormal velocity disconjugacy during the first 10% of the displacement in patients with INO, oculomotor or abducens nerve palsy, and advanced extraocular muscle disease; late disconjugacy in patients with disease affecting the neuromuscular junction; and variable middle-course disconjugacy in patients with pontine lesions. When normal subjects made disconjugate saccades between two targets aligned on one eye, the initial part of the movement remained conjugate.

Conclusions: Along with conventional measures of saccades, such as peak velocity, phase planes provide a useful tool to determine the site, extent, and pathogenesis of disconjugacy. We hypothesize that the pale global extraocular muscle fibers, which drive the high-acceleration component of saccades, receive a neural command that ensures initial ocular conjugacy.

Glossary

Abd.=
abducens;
CN=
cranial nerve;
CPEO=
chronic progressive external ophthalmoplegia;
EM=
eye movement;
H=
horizontal;
INO=
internuclear ophthalmoparesis;
MG=
myasthenia gravis;
MLF=
medial longitudinal fasciculus;
MS=
multiple sclerosis;
P=
patient;
PI=
prediction interval;
PPRF=
paramedian pontine reticular formation;
RIP=
raphe interpositus;
V=
vertical.
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