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Influence of optokinetic and vestibular stimuli on the performance of smooth pursuit eye movements:
Lencer RM, Clarke AHAbteilung Psychiatrie, Medizinische Universitat zu Lubeck, Germany.
In
real-life situations, such as during locomotion, or while driving a
vehicle, it is necessary to maintain visual fixation and tracking in
the presence of the visual flow of the surroundings, which represents a
potentially adequate stimulus for the elicitation of optokinetic
nystagmus. The present study is concerned with the influence of
vestibular disorders, whether pathological or experimentally induced,
on those cortically controlled fixation mechanisms, predominantly in
the smooth pursuit system, which are involved in suppressing
optokinetic information. The study examines the possibility of
obtaining an objective measure to assist in counselling patients with
unilateral vestibular loss on their vehicle driving ability. To this
end, the influence of optokinetic and vestibular stimulation on the
execution of smooth pursuit target tracking was measured by recording
eye movements during a combination of standard pursuit tasks (0.25, 0.5
and 1 Hz sinusoidal) against standard optokinetic striped backgrounds
(0, 30 and 60 degrees/sec). The influence of vestibular imbalance,
induced in healthy subjects (n = 35) by unilateral caloric irrigation,
and caused by unilateral vestibular loss (in five patients), was also
examined under these conditions. During induced vestibular imbalance in
normal subjects, and to a greater extent in the tested patients,
significant deficits in smooth pursuit gain and increases in saccade
frequency were observed during target pursuit against an optokinetic
background. Moreover, the findings indicate that the most sensitive
parameter for the influence of vestibular optokinetic stimuli on smooth
pursuit is frequency of saccades, rather than the gain factor. The
tests described here are appropriate for clinical and medico-legal
assessment of the influence of vestibular disorder on vehicle driving.
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