Literature DB >> 6639406

Downbeating nystagmus. A review of 62 cases.

G M Halmagyi, P Rudge, M A Gresty, M D Sanders.   

Abstract

We reviewed the clinical and oculomotor findings in 62 patients with downbeating nystagmus (DBN). Only those patients whose DBN was enhanced in lateral gaze were included. Apart from gait ataxia, few patients had additional neurologic signs. The two most common causes of DBN were cerebellar ectopia (25%) and cerebellar degeneration (25%) with another 10% having a variety of conditions. In about 40% the cause remained undiagnosed. In some patients with idiopathic DBN and in others with DBN due to cerebellar ectopia, the disease progressed slowly, if at all. In DBN the slow-phase velocity is dependent on vertical head position and head velocity in pitch; vertical pursuit, particularly downward pursuit, is defective and vertical vestibulo-ocular reflexes are intact. We concluded that at least some cases of DBN were due to an imbalance in otolithocular reflexes. The lesion causing DBN appears to be in the vestibulocerebellum, perhaps the nodulus, a structure that normally inhibits otolith-ocular reflexes.

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Year:  1983        PMID: 6639406     DOI: 10.1001/archneur.40.13.777

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Arch Neurol        ISSN: 0003-9942


  22 in total

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Review 5.  Investigations of disorders of balance.

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9.  Upbeat nystagmus: clinicoanatomical correlations in 15 patients.

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