Diplopia and Eye Movement
Diplopia and Eye Movement
Diplopia and Eye Movement
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iplopiaseeing doubleis a symptom with many potential causes, both neurological and ophthalmological. Accurate diagnosis and appropriate plans of management can be achieved with careful history taking and clinical examination. In this article we review the practical points for clinicians dealing with diplopia. The general approach is demonstrated in fig 1. A diagnosis of functional diplopia should not be entertained based simply on the absence of gross ocular misalignment, because sometimes very subtle misalignment of the ocular axes, which are difficult to elucidate at the bedside, may require more sensitive tests. On the other hand, one should not be surprised to see gross ocular misalignment without diplopia as brain plasticity usually takes over if diplopia is longstanding and the image from one eye is suppressed.
HISTORY TAKING
Careful history taking has an important role in the management of diplopia and details of the history can be used to focus examination on areas of relevance. The following points in the history should be elucidated. Is the diplopia monocular or binocular? Whether the diplopia is monocular or binocular should be determined first. Should the symptom of diplopia persist with one eye occluded, the patient has monocular diplopia, the causes of which are usually ophthalmological with refractive error being the most common (table 1). Binocular diplopia resolves when one eye is occluded and it is caused by misalignment of the visual axes, and can be due to many different aetiologies. It is very important to distinguish monocular from binocular diplopia because their possible causes differ significantly. Monocular diplopia is usually caused by intraocular pathology, therefore detailed ophthalmological assessment is required. The characteristics of the images may help to localise the problem. For example, a combination of glare and impaired visual acuity can be seen in monocular diplopia caused by cataract. Patients with macular disease causing monocular diplopia may also describe bent or warped images. Rarely, monocular diplopia may be seen in disorders of the primary or secondary visual cortex, especially when they are bilateral or the patient sees more than two images (cerebral polyopia). This group of patients may also describe palinopsiamultiple images appearing in the visual scene soon after gaze has been turned away from an object or after it has been removed from view. Alignment of the images and the direction that results in the most separation Questions should be asked to identify if the diplopia is horizontal, vertical, or oblique. Horizontal diplopia, without vertical separation, is related to the impaired neural control or function of the medial rectus muscle, the lateral rectus muscle, or both. The direction of gaze that increases the separation of the images can be helpful in determining which extraocular muscle is involved. The images are maximally separated when the direction of gaze is in the region of action of the paretic muscle. For example, left trochlear nerve palsy causes most image separation on right and downward gaze. Horizontal diplopia that occurs almost exclusively at near distance is strongly suggestive of convergence insufficiency. Oblique separation with one image slightly tilted is indicative of either superior or inferior oblique muscle dysfunction. Pronounced image tilting (90 or 180 may be seen in lateral ) medullary syndrome. Aniseikonia, a condition caused by notable discrepancy of the refractive errors between two eyes, gives rise to diplopia because one image is smaller than the other and superimposed. Onset and progression of the symptoms The onset of diplopia by its very nature is almost always sudden. Therefore, an abrupt onset of diplopia does not necessarily imply a vascular cause. Progression and the temporal sequence of symptoms provide much useful information. Diplopia that reaches the maximum image separation instantly and improves spontaneously is usually caused by a single event, often
See end of article for authors affiliations _________________________ Correspondence to: Professor Christopher Kennard, Department of Visual Neuroscience, Division of Neuroscience and Psychological Medicine, Imperial College London, Charing Cross Campus, St Dunstans Road, London W6 8RP, UK; c.kennard@imperial. ac.uk _________________________
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Repetitive images
Ghosting image
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Retinal disease
No misalignment
Misalignment
Comitant strabismus Dissmilar image Similar images Childhood strabismus Macular disease Marked refractive asymmetry Constant Physiologic Non-organic Intermittent MS Myasthenia gravis Decompensating phoria
Figure 1 General approach to diplopia.
Incomitant strabismus Restrictive disease Cranial neuropathy Supranuclear disorder Ocular myopathies Neuromuscular junction disorder
presumed to be vascular. On the other hand, progression or change of the pattern of diplopia usually indicates ongoing pathology such as a compressive lesion. Intermittent diplopia with associated ptosis and diurnal variation is suggestive of a neuromuscular junction disorder, such as myasthenia gravis. Exacerbating and relieving factors Blinking can improve monocular diplopia from corneal astigmatism or simply dry eyes, whereas it has no effect on cataract or macular diseases. Myasthenia gravis should be considered if diplopia is aggravated by intensive use of the eyes, has a tendency to worsen towards the end of the day, and is improved with rest. Associated symptoms Periorbital pain or pain on eye movements may be indicative of inflammatory causes. In the absence of obvious ptosis, a history of intermittent ptosis should be identified. Visual loss from optic neuropathy is usually seen in an orbital apex lesion. However, poor vision does not necessarily indicate optic nerve involvement because a pure oculomotor nerve Table 1 Causes of monocular diplopia
c Refractive error c Corneal disease (for example, irregular astigmatism) c Iris injury c Cataract c Media opacity c Macular disease c Primary or secondary visual cortex disorder (usually bilateral monocular diplopia)
palsy can also result in a loss of the accommodative reflex and therefore poor near vision, which should improve with a pinhole. Weakness of proximal limb muscles may indicate the possibility of a mitochondrial myopathy, congenital myopathy, or myasthenia gravis. Past medical history and family history A significant past medical history, especially of childhood strabismus, treatment with prisms, or eye occlusion therapy and ocular surgery, should be identified. A diagnosis of ocular nerve palsy from a vascular cause may be supported by significant vascular risk factors such as hypertension and diabetes mellitus.
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pupils. If the light reflection is not in the centre, heterotropia is present. However, this test is not very sensitive as it requires 7 of ocular deviation to cause 1 mm of shift of the reflection from the centre. The coveruncover test, in which each eye is covered and then uncovered in turn, is more sensitive and should be able to demonstrate the deviated eye by observing refixation immediately after being uncovered. If the uncovered eye moves to take up fixation, it can be assumed that under binocular viewing conditions the eye was not aligned with fixation, and a manifest deviation was present (a tropia). Inward movement of the uncovered eye indicates an exotropia, and an outward movement an esotropia. A vertical deviation may be either a hypotropia or a hypertropia, depending on whether the eye moves up or down respectively. The examiner should determine whether the tropia is comitant or non-comitant by seeing if the magnitude of the deviation varies with the position of the eye, by which the variation is not seen in the former but present in the latter. The test is then repeated, and the same observations made while covering the other eye. The alternate cover test is more dissociating than the cover uncover test and it may demonstrate subtle heterotropia more readily. If no tropia is present and the uncovered eye shows refixation during the alternate cover test, the patient has a latent deviation (a phoria). It is conventional that if there is a vertical deviation of the eyes, the higher of the two is referred to as hypertropic/hyperphoric, regardless of which eye is at fault. The range of eye movements is examined by asking the patient to follow a target, placed 50 cm away in order to avoid convergence, and the patient should be asked to report any diplopia during the examination. It is conventional to record cardinal eye positions in an H fashion from the patients perspective (fig 2). This method helps identify the paretic muscle more clearly as each direction corresponds with the main action of a particular extraocular muscle. Subjective diplopia in the absence of visible ocular motility restriction should be further tested by occluding each eye in turn, and the general rule is that the outer image comes from the paretic eye. For example, if the patient reports diplopia in left gaze and the outer image disappears with right eye occluded, the patient has a right medial rectus palsy. Parks three-step test has been commonly used for identifying the paretic muscle in vertical diplopia. The steps are as follows: c To determine which eye is hypertropic in the primary position. Example: If the right eye is hypertropic, one of four muscles must be paretic; right eye depressors (right superior oblique and right inferior rectus) or left eye elevators (left inferior oblique and left superior rectus). c To determine whether the hypertropia increases in right or left horizontal gaze. Example: If the hypertropia is worse
SR IO IO
on left gaze, the affected muscles have now been limited to two muscles; right superior oblique and left superior rectus muscles. c To determine whether the hypertropia is worse on head tilting to left or right (Bielschowsky test). Example: If the hypertropia is worse on head tilting to the right, only one possible paretic muscle remains; right superior oblique muscle. However, this step does not always show the difference and other clues should be used if this step is negative. Although the range of eye movements on examination yields most information in identifying the paretic muscle, clues from general examination helps to confirm the abnormalities of eye movement and localise the disease process. Self manipulation of head posture is one of the most effective ways to minimise diplopia. This strategy is commonly used by patients with both acute and chronic diplopia. The head is usually turned or tilted to the position where the action of the paretic muscle is least required. Rarely, patients with longstanding diplopia might adopt the head posture that makes the images most separated in order to suppress one image more easily. Certain head postures may be helpful, such as head tilting to the opposite side of a trochlear nerve palsy and the face turning towards the side of an oculomotor nerve palsy. Evidence for exophthalmos should be examined by observing the eyes from above the patients head. The supraorbital ridges can be used as a reference point. The Hertel exophthalmometer gives more precise readings which can be used both for diagnosis and follow up. A difference greater than 2 mm between the eyes is almost always pathological. Visual field testing should be undertaken routinely because the pattern of any field defect may assist in localisation. For example, bitemporal hemianopia may also cause diplopia due to the patients inability to fuse the image on the nasal field from one eye to the image on the temporal field of the other eye (hemifield slip). Eyelid function should also be examined and recorded with the face unturned and untilted. The normal upper eyelid position should be just below the top of the iris and ptosis is therefore present if the upper eyelid is below this point. Complete ptosis is seen only in oculomotor nerve palsy whereas partial ptosis can be seen in either oculomotor nerve palsy or Horners syndrome. Pupil examination helps to discriminate these two conditions where a mydriatic pupil is seen in the former and a meiotic pupil in the latter. A combination of ptosis, weakness of eyelid closure, and restricted eye movements is strongly suggestive of a myopathic cause such as chronic progressive external ophthalmoplegia (CPEO). Lid laga condition where the eyelid lags behind the eye on downward pursuit movementis indicative of
SR
Figure 2 Conventional clinical recording of ocular motility. Each direction corresponds with the main action of each particular extraocular LR muscle. It is drawn from the patients perspective. MR, medial rectus; LR, lateral rectus; SR, superior rectus; IR, inferior rectus; SO, superior oblique; IO, inferior oblique.
LR
MR
MR
IR Left eye
SO
SO Right eye
IR
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thyroid eye disease. Lid retraction is not specific to thyroid ophthalmopathy because it can also be seen in dorsal midbrain syndrome and sympathetic overactivity. Myasthenia gravis should be considered if the ocular motility restriction does not follow the distribution of any particular ocular motor nerve. Fatigability of eye movements and eyelids, a typical finding in myasthenia gravis, should be sought by asking the patient to sustain upward gaze for at least 12 minutes. In addition, fatigability of eye movements can be demonstrated by examining repetitive saccades or sustained gaze in various directions. Myopathic disorders rarely cause diplopia because the progression is usually very slow, but should be considered when eye movement restriction is bilateral, accompanied by ptosis and weakness of eyelid closure, and especially when there is a history of family members affected in a similar manner. Is the diplopia caused by mechanical restriction or a neurogenic paresis? It is important to determine whether the restricted eye movement is caused by weakness of the agonist muscle or a mechanical restriction of the antagonist muscle. For example, Browns syndrome (superior oblique tendon sheath syndrome), which causes tethering of the superior oblique muscle, has a similar eye movement pattern to an inferior oblique paresis. Observation of the eye movement velocity can help differentiate between these two categories. In neurogenic paresis, as the eyes move into the direction of the defect, the underacting eye will move smoothly but progressively slower than the other eye. In contrast, eye movements will be smooth and symmetrical in mechanical restriction until the eye meets the point of obstruction, which causes abrupt slowing. When it is uncertain the forced duction test can be performed to distinguish between these two conditions. A full range of eye movements is observed in neurogenic paresis but not in mechanical restriction. Is the diplopia caused by a peripheral or a central neurogenic paresis? In general, diplopia secondary to brainstem lesions is usually accompanied by other neurological symptoms including hemiparesis, abnormal movement, and cerebellar signs. However, a single ocular nerve palsy in the absence of other neurological signs is usually peripheral, but the advent of magnetic resonance image (MRI) scanning has identified a focal central lesion as a not uncommon cause. Ocular motility restriction may be seen in supranuclear gaze disorders, but the patients rarely complain of diplopia because supranuclear gaze palsy is usually conjugate without misalignments. A supranuclear gaze palsy can be confirmed by the oculocephalic reflex whereby the reduced range of movement can be overcome by this procedure.
the possibilities of a compressive lesion, especially a posterior communicating artery aneurysm. The oculomotor nerve divides into two subdivisions, the superior and inferior branches, in the superior orbital fissure. The superior branch supplies the superior rectus and the levator palpebrae superioris muscle. Although a combination of ptosis and ipsilateral superior rectus palsy is suggestive of a peripheral pathology that affects the superior branch of the oculomotor nerve, incomplete damage to the ipsilateral oculomotor nerve fascicle or nucleus may also lead to a similar set of signs. Therefore, MRI may be required to distinguish between the two. Trochlear nerve palsy (CN IV) Trochlear nerve palsy is the most common cause for vertical extraocular muscle weakness and vertical diplopia. However, other causes of an apparent superior oblique palsy such as myasthenia gravis and thyroid eye disease should be excluded before it can be attributed to a trochlear nerve lesion. It is sometimes problematic to test superior oblique function in the presence of an ipsilateral oculomotor nerve palsy, because adduction is required for the superior oblique to act as an eye depressor. However, it is possible to declare intact superior oblique function if in this situation the affected eye intorts on attempted downward gaze. A rare disorder is superior oblique myokymia in which there are bursts of small amplitude, high frequency torsional oscillations of one eye. This results in symptoms of intermittent vertical or torsional diplopia, monocular blurring of vision, and tremulous sensations in the eye that usually last less than 10 seconds and occur many times per day. The oscillation can be very subtle and observation with an ophthalmoscope or slit lamp when the patient is looking down and in may be required. This condition is usually benign and sensitive to small doses of gabapentin or carbamazepine. If drug treatment fails, surgical procedures such as superior oblique tenectomy with myectomy of the ipsilateral inferior oblique muscle are available. Abducens nerve palsy (CN VI) Abducens nerve palsy, which results in a lateral rectus muscle paresis and therefore horizontal diplopia, is the most common type of ocular nerve palsy, because the abducens nerve has the longest intracranial course and is therefore susceptible to direct and indirect insults. Although isolated abducens nerve palsy can be secondary to pathology of the nerve itself, such as microvascular infarction or direct compression, transient dysfunction caused by raised intracranial pressure from various aetiologies is also a possibility when it becomes a false localising sign. Combined ocular motor nerve palsies It is important to distinguish multiple ocular motor palsies from orbital or neuromuscular diseases such as dysthyroid eye disease, myasthenia gravis, and myopathic syndromes. This can usually be achieved by careful consideration of the progression and associated signs. Unilateral multiple ocular motor nerve palsies are usually associated with lesions involving the cavernous sinus, superior orbital fissure, or orbital apex. Differentiation between lesions at these sites is suggested by sensory disturbances in the first and sometimes second divisions of the trigeminal nerve, sensory loss in the first division only, and proptosis with visual loss, respectively. In the cavernous sinus syndrome, it is not uncommon to find
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Sup. rect.
Inf. obl.
Inf. obl.
Sup. rect.
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Sup. rect. temp Lat. rect. Lat. rect. Inf. obl. Med. rect. Med. rect. Med. rect. Inf. obl. Med. rect. Sup. rect. Lat. rect. Lat. rect. nasal temp
Inf. rect.
Sup. obl.
Sup. obl.
Inf. rect.
Inf. rect.
Sup. obl.
Sup. obl.
Inf. rect.
Figure 3 Hess chart plotted from the patients perspective. Range of eye movement is smaller in the right eye, therefore, it is a paretic eye. The diagnosis is right superior oblique palsy.
that the pupil size is relatively unaffected despite significant dysfunction of the oculomotor nerve. It has been suggested that this is caused by coincident parasympathetic (via oculomotor nerve) and sympathetic (via internal carotid artery) nerve paresis. Pathology in the cavernous sinus syndrome varies widely from cavernous sinus thrombosis (complication of infectious and non-infectious processes), infection (mycobacteria, fungus), tumour (meningioma, lymphoma), and granulomatous inflammation (TolosaHunt syndrome). Cavernous sinus syndrome often requires extensive investigations, especially high resolution brain imaging with contrast enhancement that should include both orbits and cavernous sinuses, in addition to the brain.
Electrophysiological investigation is of use in certain clinical circumstances when, for example, myasthenia gravis is suspected. Although it is usual to request electromyography (EMG) and nerve conduction studies with a repetitive stimulation test as standard investigations for myasthenia gravis, single fibre EMG (SFEMG) may be valuable because it is much more sensitive.
INVESTIGATION
The investigation of an adult usually consists of assessment of their eye position and movement. The Hess chart is commonly used to provide a pictorial and reproducible record of the patients eye movements (fig 3). The patient is seated facing the screen being plotted, with the head centred on the fixation spot. Each eye is plotted in turn for the central fixation spot and targets at 15 and 30 eccentricity, respectively. Some general rules for interpreting a Hess chart are as follows: c The smaller field belongs to the paretic eye c Neurogenic pareses will show the largest underaction in the direction of paretic muscle and the largest over-action is seen in the contralateral synergist c Mechanical defects show a compressed field without obvious over-action. The advent of clinical imaging, the computed tomographic (CT) and MRI scan, opened a new era in clinical neurology and also clinical neuro-ophthalmology. In order to get the best out of imaging, scans should be requested to look for specific regions of the brain guided by the clinical findings. For example, it would be more appropriate to request an MRI scan of the cavernous sinuses and orbits instead of the whole brain in a case of cavernous sinus syndrome. For suspected orbital disorders a thin section CT scan through the orbit may be more useful than an MRI scan.
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Functional class of eye movements The various types of eye movements subserve the same goalthe projection and maintenance of an image of the object of interest onto the high resolution part of the retina, the fovea. A saccade, a rapid conjugate eye movement, is the most efficient way to bring the image of a new object of interest onto the fovea. Vergence eye movements ensure that the image of the object of interest is simultaneously projected onto both foveae, regardless of its distance from the observer. Images of a moving object are kept stabilised on the fovea by pursuit eye movements. Vestibular and optokinetic systems keep the images steady on the fovea and adjust the visual axes to the movement of the subjects head or body. These different types of eye movement can be rapidly examined both at the bedside and by eye movement recording devices.
Smooth pursuit Both horizontal and vertical pursuit eye movements can be examined by instructing the patient to track a small target at about 1 m distance, while keeping the head still. The target should be moved at a slow and uniform speed and the examiner should observe the smoothness of the following eye movement. Broken pursuit is a non-specific sign if present in both directions and may occur with fatigue and anticonvulsant drugs. However, if broken pursuit is seen in only one direction, it may indicate a focal posterior cortical lesion ipsilateral to the direction of broken pursuit. Vergence The vergence system can be examined by asking the patient to track an object that is gradually brought closer to the patients nose. Alternatively, vergence eye movement can also be examined by telling the patient to look to the distance and then focus onto a close object. Normal subjects should be able to keep the image single up to the tip of the nose and the resulting convergence should be accompanied by accommodative reflexes. However, inability to converge is not always pathologic as many people are not good convergers. Patients with convergence insufficiency usually present in early adulthood with eye strain, double vision, and difficulty maintaining near visual function that may respond to convergence exercise therapy. This condition is usually benign but may be caused by closed head trauma or viral encephalitis. On the other hand, convergence paralysistotal failure of convergence with normal adduction that results in constant diplopia at nearusually requires further investigation to exclude midbrain pathology and toxic encephalopathy. Optokinetic nystagmus (OKN) The optokinetic system cannot be properly assessed at bedside because the OKN drum commonly used examines smooth pursuit and not the optokinetic system. A full-field revolving striped drum is required to elicit true OKN. Vestibular system This is discussed by Davies (see p iv32).
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C
(Parinauds syndrome) is caused by a lesion that affects the posterior commissure and results in skew deviation, lightnear dissociation of pupil constriction, and convergence retraction nystagmus, in addition to a vertical gaze palsy. The common causes are pineal tumour and hydrocephalus, and it can be secondary to drugs such as barbiturates, neuroleptics, and carbamazepine. When this syndrome is acute, the eyes are tonically deviated downwards (the setting sun sign), and this sign is well described in premature infants following intraventricular haemorrhage.
Figure 4 Common waveforms of saccadic oscillations and nystagmus. (A) Ocular flutter. Note back-to-back saccade without fixation between saccades. (B) Square wave jerks. Fixation of approximately 200 ms between two saccades. (C) Jerk nystagmus; slow phase and fast phase. (D) Pendular nystagmus; equal velocities in both phases.
eye movements, although impairment of vertical eye movements may also be seen. Internuclear ophthalmoplegia A lesion of the medial longitudinal fasciculus (MLF) results in an internuclear ophthalmoplegia (INO), in which there is a disturbance of adduction ipsilateral to the side of the lesion and also nystagmus of the contralateral abducting eye. In a partial INO, adduction will be slowed but it will be completely absent in a complete lesion. Convergence should be examined and intact convergence usually indicates a more caudal lesion (posterior INO). In contrast, absent convergence is seen in a rostral lesion (anterior INO) as the medial rectus subdivision of the contralateral oculomotor nucleus will also be affected. The most common causes of INO include demyelination and vascular infarction. Bilateral INO is very suggestive of a demyelinating process and it can cause in addition impaired vertical pursuit and vestibular eye movements, and impaired vertical gaze holding with gaze evoked nystagmus on looking up and down. More extensive lesions affecting both MLFs and the abducens nucleus on one side only results in a one-and-a-half syndrome. The only preserved horizontal eye movement is abduction of the contralateral eye. The main causes of one-and-a-half syndrome are brainstem ischaemia, haemorrhage, and tumour. Abnormalities of vertical eye movements Disturbances of vertical gaze are usually associated with damage to either the posterior commissure, the vertical equivalent of the PPRF, the rostral interstitial nucleus of the medial longitudinal fasciculus (riMLF), and the interstitial nucleus of Cajal, or a combination of these structures. Interpretation of limited vertical gaze should be undertaken with care because restricted upward gaze is seen in the normal elderly. Downward gaze palsy is usually pathologic and may be seen in brainstem lesions and certain neurodegenerative disorders such as progressive supranuclear palsy or adult Niemanns-Pick disease. Dorsal midbrain syndrome
c Combination of horizontal, c Unidirectional vertical and torsional nystagmus c Associated with severe vertigo c Quick phase beating away from the underactive labyrinth c Amplitude increases with gaze toward the direction of quick phase c Notably suppressed by fixation c May be gaze evoked c Mild or no vertigo
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saccadic abnormalities is not yet available but these conditions may resolve with time or once the cause has been treated. Nystagmus Nystagmus can be classified into two categories based on the velocity of both phases. When the slow movement that takes the eye away from the target is followed by a fast phase, it is called jerk nystagmus, and if both phases have equal velocity, pendular nystagmus is observed. Patients with nystagmus usually have other brainstem, cerebellar, and vestibular symptoms and signs, which should be considered for diagnosis purposes. Although nystagmus almost always prompts the clinician to identify the cause, symptomatic treatment of nystagmus is indicated only when oscillopsiaillusion of movement of the seen worldis present. The most common form of jerk nystagmus is vestibular nystagmus. It is most frequently a result of damage to the vestibular apparatus that may be either peripheral (labyrinth, vestibular nerve) or central (brainstem). These two categories can be distinguished clinically by careful observation of the features described in table 2. Downbeat nystagmus, a jerk nystagmus with the quick phase moving downwards, is seen in bilateral disturbance of the cerebellar flocculus and lesions at the cranio-cervical junction, such as Chiari malformation type 1. Other causes include cerebellar degeneration, anticonvulsant and lithium intoxication, and intra-axial brainstem lesions; however, no cause can be identified in half of the patients. Symptomatic treatment for downbeat nystagmus is rather limited, but gabapentin and 3, 4-diaminopyridine are worth trying. Upbeat nystagmus, when present in the primary position, is usually associated with focal brainstem lesions in the tegmental grey matter. The most common causes are multiple sclerosis, tumour, infarction, and cerebellar degeneration. Torsional jerk nystagmus is usually seen in combination with other types of nystagmus. However, pure torsional nystagmus indicates a lesion of the lateral medulla involving the vestibular nuclei. Periodic alternating nystagmus (PAN) is a primary position horizontal nystagmus that changes direction in a crescendodecrescendo fashion, characteristically every 90 seconds, with a null period of 010 seconds between each directional change. This condition can be congenital or associated with various lesions at the brainstem and cranio-cervical junction, and anticonvulsant intoxication. Baclofen has been shown to be effective in PAN and the response is usually dramatic. Gaze evoked nystagmus, a jerk nystagmus present only on eccentric gaze but not in the primary position, is commonly seen and has limited localising value. Bilateral horizontal and vertical gaze evoked nystagmus commonly occurs with structural brainstem and cerebellar lesions, diffuse metabolic disorder, and drug intoxication. Pendular nystagmus can be either congenital or acquired. The acquired form is usually seen in multiple sclerosis, visual loss (including unilateral optic neuropathy), brainstem ischaemia, and spinocerebellar degenerations. It can affect one eye or both, equally or unequally, and often results in oscillopsia. When it is present in association with palatal myoclonus, oculopalatal myoclonus, the lesion usually involves the red nucleus, dentate nucleus, and inferior olivary nucleus (Mollarets triangle). In see-saw nystagmus, one eye intorts and rises while the other eye extorts and falls in a
rapidly alternating sequence. It usually signifies a parasellar lesion that may also cause bitemporal hemianopia. Congenital nystagmus is almost invariably a horizontal conjugate nystagmus unaltered by vertical position. Certain features are characteristic of congenital nystagmus including worsening on fixation, improvement on convergence, and the presence of a null pointa position of gaze where the nystagmus is minimal or absent. Latent nystagmus is a type of congenital nystagmus that is only present on monocular viewing and beats toward the viewing eye.
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C Danchaivijitr, C Kennard, Department of Visual Neuroscience, Division of Neuroscience and Psychological Medicine, Imperial College, London, UK
REFERENCES
1 Miller NR, Newman NJ, eds. Walsh & Hoyts clinical neuro-ophthalmology the essentials, 5th ed. Baltimore: Williams & Wilkins, 1998. 2 Leigh RJ, Zee DS. The neurology of eye movements, 3rd ed. Oxford University Press, 1999. 3 Liu G, Volpe N, Galetta S. Neuro-ophthalmology: diagnosis and management, Saunders, 2000. 4 Kennard C. Normal and abnormal eye movements. In: Luxon L, ed. A textbook of audiological medicine: clinical aspects of hearing and balance. London: Martin Dunitz, 2003:78196. 5 Leigh RJ, Kennard C. Using saccades as a research tool in the clinical neurosciences. Brain 2004;127(Pt 3):46077. 6 Stahl JS, Plant GT, Leigh RJ. Medical treatment of nystagmus and its visual consequences. J R Soc Med 2002;95:2357. 7 Halmagyi GM, Rudge P, Gresty M, et al. Treatment of periodic alternating nystagmus. Ann Neurol 1980;8:60911. 8 Strupp M, Schuler O, Krafczyk S, et al. Treatment of downbeat nystagmus with 3, 4-diaminopyridine: a placebo-controlled study. Neurology 2003;61:16570.
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