Garbutt Siobhan, Han Yanning, Kumar Arun N, Harwood Mark, Harris Chris M, Leigh R John
Department of Neurology, Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center and University Hospitals, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio 44106, USA.
Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci. 2003 Sep;44(9):3833-41. doi: 10.1167/iovs.03-0066.
Optokinetic stimulation induces nystagmus that can be used to test the saccadic and visual-tracking systems in some patients with voluntary gaze palsies. The purpose of this study was to characterize vertical optokinetic nystagmus (OKN) in normal human subjects, comparing the dynamic properties of the quick phases with voluntary saccades of similar size and measuring the slow-phase responses to visual stimuli with a range of spatial and temporal frequencies.
Vertical OKN and saccades were recorded in 10 healthy adult subjects (age range, 24-54 years) using the magnetic search coil technique. The optokinetic (OK) stimulus subtended 72 degrees horizontally and 60 degrees vertically, consisted of black-and-white stripes with a spatial frequency of 0.04, 0.08, or 0.16 cyc/deg, and moved vertically at 10 to 50 deg/s. Vertical and horizontal saccades to visual targets separated by 1 degrees to 10 degrees were also elicited.
Over 95% of quick phases were less than 10 degrees in amplitude; voluntary saccades of this amplitude range were slightly faster than quick phases of similar size. The amplitude-peak velocity relationships and amplitude-duration relationships of upward and downward fast movements (saccades or quick phases) were similar. Most vertical slow-phase OK responses showed greater gain for upward stimulus motion. OK gain decreased with increasing stimulus speed and increased spatial frequency, so that there was a general decrease in slow-phase velocity gain with increasing temporal frequency.
In this study, the best OK responses were obtained using stripes with lower spatial frequencies and lower stripe speeds (0.4 cyc/deg at 10 deg/s). The dynamic properties of vertical quick phases of nystagmus are similar enough to those of voluntary saccades for OK stimulation to be used as a clinical test of the vertical saccadic system in individuals with voluntary gaze palsy.
视动刺激可诱发眼球震颤,可用于检测一些患有随意性注视麻痹患者的扫视和视觉跟踪系统。本研究的目的是描述正常人类受试者的垂直视动性眼球震颤(OKN),比较快速相的动态特性与相似大小的随意性扫视,并测量对一系列空间和时间频率的视觉刺激的慢相反应。
使用磁搜索线圈技术在10名健康成年受试者(年龄范围24 - 54岁)中记录垂直OKN和扫视。视动(OK)刺激在水平方向上张角为72度,垂直方向上张角为60度,由空间频率为0.04、0.08或0.16周/度的黑白条纹组成,并以10至50度/秒的速度垂直移动。还诱发了对相隔1度至10度的视觉目标的垂直和水平扫视。
超过95%的快速相幅度小于10度;这个幅度范围内的随意性扫视比相似大小的快速相略快。向上和向下快速运动(扫视或快速相)的幅度-峰值速度关系和幅度-持续时间关系相似。大多数垂直慢相OK反应显示向上刺激运动时增益更大。OK增益随刺激速度增加而降低,随空间频率增加而增加,因此随着时间频率增加,慢相速度增益总体上降低。
在本研究中,使用较低空间频率和较低条纹速度(10度/秒时0.4周/度)的条纹可获得最佳OK反应。眼球震颤垂直快速相的动态特性与随意性扫视的动态特性足够相似,使得OK刺激可作为患有随意性注视麻痹个体垂直扫视系统的临床测试。