| Literature DB >> 29467711 |
Alessandro Serra1, Clara G Chisari2, Manuela Matta3.
Abstract
Multiple sclerosis (MS) commonly causes eye movement abnormalities that may have a significant impact on patients' disability. Inflammatory demyelinating lesions, especially occurring in the posterior fossa, result in a wide range of disorders, spanning from acquired pendular nystagmus (APN) to internuclear ophthalmoplegia (INO), among the most common. As the control of eye movements is well understood in terms of anatomical substrate and underlying physiological network, studying ocular motor abnormalities in MS provides a unique opportunity to gain insights into mechanisms of disease. Quantitative measurement and modeling of eye movement disorders, such as INO, may lead to a better understanding of common symptoms encountered in MS, such as Uhthoff's phenomenon and fatigue. In turn, the pathophysiology of a range of eye movement abnormalities, such as APN, has been clarified based on correlation of experimental model with lesion localization by neuroimaging in MS. Eye movement disorders have the potential of being utilized as structural and functional biomarkers of early cognitive deficit, and possibly help in assessing disease status and progression, and to serve as platform and functional outcome to test novel therapeutic agents for MS. Knowledge of neuropharmacology applied to eye movement dysfunction has guided testing and use of a number of pharmacological agents to treat some eye movement disorders found in MS, such as APN and other forms of central nystagmus.Entities:
Keywords: eye movements; internuclear ophthalmoplegia; multiple sclerosis; nystagmus; pathologic saccades
Year: 2018 PMID: 29467711 PMCID: PMC5807658 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2018.00031
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.003
Eye movement disorders of multiple sclerosis.
Strabismus Exotropia, especially in association with bilateral INO Esotropia, commonly due to sixth nerve palsy Vertical deviation, usually a skew deviation in association with INO Disruption of steady fixation Gaze-evoked nystagmus Acquired pendular nystagmus Upbeat, downbeat, and torsional nystagmus Positionally induced nystagmus, usually associated with vertigo Saccadic intrusions and oscillations Impaired vestibulo-ocular responses, especially vertically associated with INO Impaired smooth pursuit, optokinetic, and eye-head tracking, especially vertically associated with INO Disorders of saccades: dysmetria, adduction slowing in INO, ocular flutter Horizontal gaze paresis or palsy Dorsal midbrain syndrome |
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Figure 1Summary of a simple model for generating horizontal gaze shifts in INO. Premotor excitatory burst neurons lying in the paramedian pontine reticular formation (PPRF), project a pulse of innervation to the abducens nucleus (CN VI). Abducens motoneurons project the pulse of innervation via the sixth nerve to the right lateral rectus, which contracts rapidly to generate an abducting saccade of the left eye. Abducens internuclear neurons project the pulse of innervation, via the medial longitudinal fasciculus (MLF, internuclear pathway), to medial rectus motoneurons that, in turn, innervate the right medial rectus via the third nerve, to generate an adducting saccade of the right eye. If the MLF is demyelinated, signals are low-pass filtered and delayed, affecting the size and timing of the pulse thus causing adducting saccades of the right eye to be slow. *Adapted with permission from Ref. (6).
Figure 2Representative horizontal leftward saccade before (A) and after Dalfampridine (B) in one patient. (A) Particularly for the leftward movement the adducting eye requires several small saccades to acquire the target (arrows) and the abducting eye shows dissociated nystagmus. (B) The right eye requires less adducting saccades to acquire the target (arrows) and dissociated nystagmus intensity is decreased. Positive values indicate rightward movements, negative values indicate leftward movements. *Adapted with permission from Ref. (49).