| Literature DB >> 36105571 |
Matthew A McDonald1, Clark H Stevenson1, Hannah M Kersten2,3, Helen V Danesh-Meyer1,3.
Abstract
Glaucoma is a common condition that relies on careful clinical assessment to diagnose and determine disease progression. There is growing evidence that glaucoma is associated not only with loss of retinal ganglion cells but also with degeneration of cortical and subcortical brain structures associated with vision and eye movements. The effect of glaucoma pathophysiology on eye movements is not well understood. In this review, we examine the evidence surrounding altered eye movements in glaucoma patients compared to healthy controls, with a focus on quantitative eye tracking studies measuring saccades, fixation, and optokinetic nystagmus in a range of visual tasks. The evidence suggests that glaucoma patients have alterations in several eye movement domains. Patients exhibit longer saccade latencies, which worsen with increasing glaucoma severity. Other saccadic abnormalities include lower saccade amplitude and velocity, and difficulty inhibiting reflexive saccades. Fixation is pathologically altered in glaucoma with reduced stability. Optokinetic nystagmus measures have also been shown to be abnormal. Complex visual tasks (eg reading, driving, and navigating obstacles), integrate these eye movements and result in behavioral adaptations. The review concludes with a summary of the evidence and recommendations for future research in this emerging field.Entities:
Keywords: driving; eye movements; eye tracking; glaucoma; optokinetic nystagmus; saccades
Year: 2022 PMID: 36105571 PMCID: PMC9467299 DOI: 10.2147/EB.S361946
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eye Brain ISSN: 1179-2744
Figure 1Schematic representation of trans-synaptic degeneration. Retinal ganglion cell atrophy leads to anterograde trans-synaptic degeneration along the optic nerve, optic tract, LGN, and optic radiation. Emerging theories suggest degeneration beyond these pathways, but this remains controversial.
Figure 2Schematic representation of trans-synaptic degeneration on a cellular scale.
Figure 3Efferent control of eye movement. (A) anterior (B) axial and (C) sagittal views of the anatomical origins of cranial nerves III, IV, and VI.
Figure 4Depiction of a prosacadde, anti-saccade, and fixation task.
Studies on Isolated Saccade and Anti-Saccade Tasks in Patients with Glaucoma
| Paper | Participants | Methods | Summary of Results |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ballae et al 2020. | Static peripheral saccade target* at 5, 7, and 10 degrees from fixation | Longer latency, reduced velocity and hypometric saccades in glaucoma groups (particularly NTG) | |
| Kanjee et al 2012. | Static peripheral saccade target* at 0 and 10 degrees from fixation | Longer latency and decreased express saccades in glaucoma. No difference between groups for saccade duration, amplitude or velocity | |
| Lamirel et al 2014. | Static peripheral saccade target* | Static: increased latency and decreased gain in glaucoma | |
| Mazumdar et al 2014. | Static peripheral saccade target* in varied eccentricities | Prolonged reaction time at all eccentricities in glaucoma groups, worse with increasing disease severity | |
| Mazumdar et al 2021. | Static peripheral saccade target* within standard automated perimetry | Increased reaction time in glaucoma (varied depending on hemifield location) | |
| Najjar et al 2017. | Static peripheral saccade target* at 5, 10, 15, and 20 degrees from fixation | Increased latencies, reduced gain, reduced amplitude at all targets, higher anti-saccade errors in glaucoma group. | |
| Tatham et al 2020. | Static peripheral saccade target* | Reduced velocities, increased latencies, decreased accuracy in glaucoma, correlated to disease severity | |
| Thepass et al 2021. | Eye movement perimetry (54-point) with 24–2 visual field | Saccade latency increased (even in areas of preserved visual field) with glaucoma severity which was also correlated to stimulus intensity and eccentricity. |
Notes: *static Peripheral Stimulus: Participants View a Central Fixation Point, Which is Extinguished After a Randomised Time Period (Within a Range of a Few Seconds) and a Stationary Saccade Target Appears in the Periphery. Participants are Asked to Look Immediately to the Saccade Target and Then Back to the Central Fixation Stimulus When It Appears. **Where type of glaucoma is not specified, this was not reported in the original paper.
Figure 5Forest plot of saccade latency as measured in milliseconds.62–67,171
Figure 6Forest plot of peak saccade velocity data as measured by degrees/ second. Ballae et al63 report their velocities as degrees/ millisecond which is interpreted by the authors as a misprint.62,63,66
Studies on Isolated Fixation Tasks in Patients with Glaucoma
| Paper | Participants | Methods | Summary of Results |
|---|---|---|---|
| Kameda et al 2009. | Microperimetry fixation task (using MP-1, Nidek, Japan) | Stable fixation in 37 eyes infixation test (32 with foveal, others paracentral). With MP, 30 eyes showed stable fixation (26 foveal, 13 paracentral). Superior and superotemporal to fovea was preferred when eccentric fixation occurred | |
| Longhin et al 2013. | Microperimetry fixation task (using MP-1, Nidek, Japan) | POAG group: 88.6% maintained fixation stability in static fixation and 11.4% achieved this in dynamic fixation during MP (significant). BCEA analysis did not reveal a difference between groups. | |
| Montesano et al 2018. | Compass perimeter fixation task | Sequential Euclidean Distance significantly increased in glaucoma patients during fixation. BCEA-95% and Mean Euclidean Distance was equivocal | |
| Shi et al 2013. | Microperimetry (MP-1) fixation task | Decreased macular sensitivity and fixation stability in early-moderate POAG. MP-1ʹs classification of fixation stability was not found to be scientifically robust | |
| Zabel et al 2022. | Microperimetry fixation task (using MAIA MP, Centervue, Italy) | Decreased fixation stability occurred with disease progression. Secondary structural analysis showed deterioration in superficial vascular complex, retinal ganglion cell layer, and peripapillary capillaries with increasing disease severity. |
Note: **Where glaucoma subtype is not specified, this was not reported in the original paper.
Figure 7Forest plot of fixation task data as measured by log-BCEA 95%. *Longhin et al98 did not report their range of BCEA values which provides a misleading effect size in this figure.86,98,99
Studies on Optokinetic Nystagmus in Patients with Glaucoma
| Paper | Participants | Methods | Summary of Results |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tong et al 2002. | Elicitation of forward, dual-directional, and reverse OKN with different interstimulus interval (ISI) duration and luminance contrast | Varying ISI duration: Almost all POAG eyes showed forward OKN and scarce reverse OKN (contrary to controls). As ISI increased, POAG eyes’ forward OKN deteriorated quicker than control | |
| Shin et al 2006. | Horizontal optokinetic stimuli for induction and suppression stimuli (vertical stripes) | Induction OKN: Minimum stripe stimulus for OKN was correlated with subjective VA for all patients. All eyes with a visual acuity better than 20/60 (>logMAR0.5) showed OKN response to thinnest stripe width | |
| Abe et al 1993. | Horizontal optokinetic stimuli for induction stimuli (vertical stripes) | Subjective contrast sensitivity was improved with horizontal OKN. Higher sensitivity for minor optic nerve damage was observed with drifting stimulus rather than stationary | |
| Severt et al 2000. | Slow phase OKN using spatial frequency doubling illusion | Select variables included in a model achieved 90% accuracy in diagnosing early POAG compared to controls: mean rate of OKN beats, and mean rate of OKN beats occurring within contiguous clusters. Near-FD stimuli produced least age-dependent (and most accurate) results |
Note: **Where glaucoma subtype is not specified, this was not reported in the original paper.
Abbreviation: FD, frequency-doubling.
Studies on Eye Movements During Reading in Patients with Glaucoma
| Paper | Participants | Methods | Summary of Results |
|---|---|---|---|
| Burton et al 2014. | Reading task: paragraphs of text. | Perceptual span† positively correlated to reading speed in both groups. Saccadic frequency positively correlated to LDT in glaucoma, but not controls. Glaucoma showed higher text saturation†† | |
| Murata et al 2017. | Freely read paragraphs of text in Japanese (horizontal direction) | Glaucoma had longer fixation duration, positively correlated to mean deviation in patient’s worse eye | |
| Smith et al 2014. | Freely read paragraphs of text comparing worst eye to better eye | Reading duration and saccade rate were higher in the worse eye. Differences were independent of size and difference in VF loss between both eyes, but rather contrast sensitivity and VA | |
| Burton et al 2012. | Freely read paragraphs of text (16 short paragraphs, eight at 100% contrast and eight at 20% contrast) for speed | Glaucoma patients showed reduced reading speed at lower contrast which correlated to disease severity (VA and VF). No difference in reading speeds between the two groups at 100% contrast | |
| Ishi 2013. | Freely read 30 sentences in MNREAD-J (Japanese vertical direction reading) for speed | Glaucoma patients showed reduced reading speed which was positively correlated with VF severity | |
| Cerulli 2013. | Freely read two seperate pieces of text (Italian) for both speed (first one) and comprehension (second one) | No difference in reading speed or comprehension between POAG and controls. Maximum eye movement along the horizontal and vertical axes were significantly increased across all stages of glaucoma progression | |
| Ramulu 2009. | Freely read aloud short passages of text straight ahead (correctly read words over 15 seconds) | Spoken reading speed was only affected by those with bilateral advanced glaucoma. VA was independent of VF loss | |
| Chen 2021. | Monocular reading of Malay language standardized test with diminishing print size. Saccade count, fixation count, regressions, and speed were recorded. | Reading speed was reduced in glaucoma patients with an increase in fixation count only. Reading speed was paradoxically decreased with a higher VF defect burden. |
Notes: **Where glaucoma subtype is not specified, this was not reported in the original paper. †Perceptual span is defined as letters read per number of saccades. ††Text saturation is defined as the distance between first and last fixation in line of text).
Studies on Eye Movements During Viewing of, and Searching for Targets Within, Static Images in Patients with Glaucoma
| Paper | Participants | Methods | Summary of Results |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nistal 2020. | Part a – observation of static images | Glaucoma revealed prolonged visual search, decreased fixations), decreased saccade velocity, and decreased fixations per saccade | |
| Glen et al 2013. | Cambridge Face Memory Test with 1000 Hz eye tracking | Patients with VF defects on 10–2 performed worse on facial recognition than non-10-2 defects and controls. Larger saccades in 10–2 defect group compared with other groups. Significant individual variability noted due to adaptation | |
| Lee et al 2019. | Report road users present in static images of driving scenes in DriveSafe Test | Shorter fixations on road users and smaller saccades in glaucoma group. Longer road user fixation led to higher DriveSafe test scores | |
| Wiecek et al 2012. | Monocular viewing for locating a target image in static scene | Glaucoma group showed fewer eye movements toward target area. Saccade directional bias and search performance was not related to VF loss. No difference between groups for total search duration, fixation duration, saccade size, and number of saccade | |
| Smith, Crabb et al, 2012 (a). | Freely view static images from natural or urban scenes | Reduced number of saccades, reduced BCEA of fixation, and increased fixation duration in glaucoma. Severity of VF loss and contrast sensitivity impairment was not associated with any eye tracking measures. Saccade amplitude showed large inter-individual variation | |
| Smith, Glen et al, 2012 (b). | Search target within static images of everyday scenes | Reduced saccade rate in glaucoma, correlated to severity of contrast sensitivity impairment and VF loss. Large inter-individual variation in number of saccades. |
Note: **Where glaucoma subtype is not specified, this was not reported in the original paper.
Studies on Eye Movement During Viewing and Searching for Targets Within Moving Images in Patients with Glaucoma
| Paper | Participants | Methods | Summary of Results |
|---|---|---|---|
| Crabb et al 2010. | Hazard perception test in video clips of driving scenes | More saccades, fixations and missed hazards in POAG, correlated with VF loss. | |
| Crabb et al 2014. | Freely viewing TV programmes with scanpaths and saccade density maps analysed via kernel principal component analysis | Eye movement patterns able to diagnose glaucoma with 79% sensitivity and 90% specificity | |
| Lee et al 2017. | Hazard perception test in video clips of driving scenes, in addition to random-dot kinematograms and drifting Gabor patches for central motion sensitivity | Delayed hazard response times in glaucoma, correlated to motion sensitivity, ‘useful field of view’, and worse eye MD. Glaucoma showed overall smaller saccades. Larger saccades were associated with faster hazard responses in the glaucoma group only. | |
| Asfaw et al 2018. | Freely view static image from film one eye at a time, in sequence | Saccade amplitude and BCEA decreased and increased saccadic reversal rate in worse eye. Between-eye BCEA values predicted between-eye MD values | |
| Soans et al 2021. | Smooth pursuit of target on screen with separate task of following target jumping in random sequence | Glaucoma had higher latencies, higher positional errors, and lower velocities relative to controls. During smooth pursuit, there was a higher time lag compared to controls. |
Note: **Where glaucoma subtype is not specified, this was not reported in the original paper.
Abbreviation: IQR, interquartile range.
Studies on Eye Movements While Walking Through an Environment in Patients with Glaucoma
| Paper | Participants | Methods | Summary of Results |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cheong et al 2008. | 8 patients with visual field defects ( | Real-world street crossing task with portable eye tracking. Participants pressed a button when they believed safe to cross the street | Traffic gap identification significantly impaired in patient group with reduction of fixation area |
| Geruschat et al 2006. | Real-world street crossing task with portable eye tracking. Patients crossed the street and returned | Visually impaired focused on vehicles when crossing rather than traffic lights | |
| Lajoie et al 2018. | Navigating an obstacle course (36 trials per participant) with single and dual-task conditions (eg counting backwards whilst walking) | Glaucoma patients walked slower in all conditions with smaller gaze distance and gaze closer to their position and direct fixation to obstacles in front. Multitasking led to increased obstacle contact in glaucoma group | |
| Sippel et al 2014. | Real-world supermarket task: collect specific products from shelves as quickly as possible | Glaucoma patients showed longer search times with frequent glancing to visual field defect as a compensatory mechanism | |
| Dive et al 2016. | Sandwich-making task and building task with children’s playset | Glaucoma patients were slower on building task. Increased fixation durations and frequency of saccades in POAG |
Note: **Where glaucoma subtype is not specified, this was not reported in the original paper.
Studies on Eye Movements During Driving in Patients with Glaucoma
| Paper | Participants | Methods | Did Participants Meet Legal Driving Standards? | Summary of Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kasneci et al 2014. | On-road driving test, 20km. German legal standard | All glaucoma subjects held a valid driving license. 6/10 glaucoma failed to pass driving test and 4/10 did not meet legal driving requirements, but passed the test | Severity of VF loss correlated to poor lane changing, driving around curves, and predicting hazards. Proportion of glances to visual field defects was correlated to its size. Those who passed had increased head and shoulder movements | |
| Kübler et al 2015. | Advanced moving-base driving simulator testing. German legal standard | 3/6 glaucoma patients passed the test. None met the legal driving requirements | Those who passed had larger saccades, more vertical scanning, and increased head movements compared to controls | |
| Lee et al 2018. | Closed-road circuit | Not evaluated | Poorer driving scores, increased collisions, larger saccades in glaucoma group. Better-eye MD was strongest predictor for driving score | |
| Nistal 2020. | Part a - observation of static images (see | Not evaluated | Hypometric saccades and decreased velocities with a higher number of collisions in glaucoma group | |
| Prado Vega et al 2013. | Fixed-base driving simulator | Not evaluated | Increased steering activity and missed more letters in glaucoma group. No difference between groups for obstacle avoidance |
Note: **Where glaucoma subtype is not specified, this was not reported in the original paper.
Abbreviation: IQR, interquartile range.
Figure 8Summary of key points.
Keywords Included in Search Strategy
| Population | Exposure/ Intervention | Outcome |
|---|---|---|
| Glaucoma, including primary open glaucoma, primary angle closure glaucoma, normal tension glaucoma, narrow angle glaucoma, perimetric and pre-perimetric | Eye-tracking, eye tracking, eye moments, video-oculography, ocular motor, oculomotor, pupil tracking, pupil-tracking, saccades, saccades, Fixation, optokinetic nystagmus (OKN), driving, reading, static images, moving images, walking through an environment, negotiating obstacles, visual exploration, street crossing, natural actions, smooth pursuit, face test, driving scenes, static scene, hazard perception, static image, obstacle course, supermarket, task, driving simulator | Gain, velocity, latency, amplitude, hypometric, hypermetric, reaction time, BCEA (bivariate contour ellipse area), fixation stability, OKN beats, OKN signal, reading speed, saccade duration, saccade rate, visual search, gaze, euclidean distance, accuracy. |
Figure 9Study selection for review according to PRISMA criteria described in Moher et al 2009.181