Sleep deprivation has a general impairing effect on the peak velocity of saccades, reflecting possible dysfunction at the level of the brainstem reticular formation. Deficits of accuracy and latency point to dysfunction of specific brain sites such as the supplementary eye field and cerebellum, whereas the cardinal functions of the frontal and parietal eye fields were not affected. These results suggest the possibility of measuring fatigue by means of saccadic parameters, especially saccadic peak velocity.
Downbeat nystagmus (DBN) is a common, usually persistent ocular motor sign in vestibulocerebellar midline lesions. Postural imbalance in DBN may increase on lateral gaze when downbeat nystagmus increases. 3,4-Diaminopyridine (3,4-DAP) has been shown to suppress the slow-phase velocity component of downbeat nystagmus and its gravity-dependent component with concomitant improvement of oscillopsia. Because the pharmacological effect is thought to be caused by improvement of the vestibulocerebellar Purkinje cell activity, the effect of 3,4-DAP on the postural control of patients with downbeat nystagmus syndrome was examined. Eye movements were recorded with the video-based Eyelink II system. Postural sway and pathway were assessed by posturography in lateral gaze in the light and on eye closure. Two out of four patients showed an improvement of the area of postural sway by 57% of control (baseline) on eye closure. In contrast, downbeat nystagmus in gaze straight ahead and on lateral gaze did not benefit in these two patients, implying a specific influence of 3,4-DAP on the vestibulocerebellar control of posture. It was concluded that 3,4-DAP may particularly influence the postural performance in patients with downbeat nystagmus.
Recovery from vestibular neuritis (VN) is often incomplete which leads to persistent vestibular imbalance during rapid head movements. Patients with unilateral vestibular lesions have a larger gain of the horizontal vestibulo-ocular reflex during active compared to passive head movements. To test whether this gain increase is related to predictive mechanisms we studied 15 patients with VN and 14 control subjects during predictable and unpredictable passive horizontal head impulses in the light and darkness. The vestibulo-ocular reflex showed a significantly shorter latency and higher gain in the light for predictable head impulses towards the ipsilesional side. However, this effect is small and might contribute but cannot exclusively account for the gain increase during active head movements.
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