Joshi Anand C, Riley David E, Mustari Michael J, Cohen Mark L, Leigh R John
Department of Biomedical Engineering, Daroff-Dell'Osso Laboratory, Veterans Affairs Medical Center and University Hospitals, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH, USA.
Vision Res. 2010 Apr 7;50(8):761-71. doi: 10.1016/j.visres.2010.01.017. Epub 2010 Feb 1.
Smooth ocular tracking of a moving visual stimulus comprises a range of responses that encompass the ocular following response (OFR), a pre-attentive, short-latency mechanism, and smooth pursuit, which directs the retinal fovea at the moving stimulus. In order to determine how interdependent these two forms of ocular tracking are, we studied vertical OFR in progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP), a parkinsonian disorder in which vertical smooth pursuit is known to be impaired. We measured eye movements of 9 patients with PSP and 12 healthy control subjects. Subjects viewed vertically moving sine-wave gratings that had a temporal frequency of 16.7 Hz, contrast of 32%, and spatial frequencies of 0.17, 0.27 or 0.44 cycles/degree. We measured OFR amplitude as change in eye position in the 70-150 ms, open-loop interval following stimulus onset. Vertical smooth pursuit was studied as subjects attempted to track a 0.27 cycles/degree grating moving sinusoidally through several cycles at frequencies between 0.1 and 2.5 Hz. We found that OFR amplitude, and its dependence on spatial frequency, was similar in PSP patients (group mean 0.10 degree) and control subjects (0.11 degree), but the latency to onset of OFR was greater for PSP patients (group mean 99 ms) than control subjects (90 ms). When OFR amplitude was re-measured, taking into account the increased latency in PSP patients, there was still no difference from control subjects. We confirmed that smooth pursuit was consistently impaired in PSP; group mean tracking gain at 0.7 Hz was 0.29 for PSP patients and 0.63 for controls. Neither PSP patients nor control subjects showed any correlation between OFR amplitude and smooth-pursuit gain. We propose that OFR is spared because it is generated by low-level motion processing that is dependent on posterior cerebral cortex, which is less affected in PSP. Conversely, smooth pursuit depends more on projections from frontal cortex to the pontine nuclei, both of which are involved in PSP. The accessory optic pathway, which is heavily involved in PSP, seems unlikely to contribute to the OFR in humans.
对移动视觉刺激进行平稳的眼球跟踪包括一系列反应,其中涵盖眼球跟随反应(OFR),这是一种前注意性、短潜伏期机制,以及平稳跟踪,它将视网膜中央凹对准移动的刺激物。为了确定这两种眼球跟踪形式的相互依赖程度,我们研究了进行性核上性麻痹(PSP)患者的垂直OFR,PSP是一种帕金森氏症,已知其垂直平稳跟踪受损。我们测量了9名PSP患者和12名健康对照者的眼球运动。受试者观看垂直移动的正弦波光栅,其时间频率为16.7Hz,对比度为32%,空间频率为0.17、0.27或0.44周/度。我们将OFR幅度测量为刺激开始后70 - 150毫秒开环间隔内眼球位置的变化。当受试者试图跟踪一个以0.1至2.5Hz频率正弦移动几个周期的0.27周/度光栅时,研究垂直平稳跟踪。我们发现,PSP患者(组均值0.10度)和对照者(0.11度)的OFR幅度及其对空间频率的依赖性相似,但PSP患者OFR开始的潜伏期(组均值99毫秒)比对照者(90毫秒)更长。当考虑到PSP患者潜伏期增加而重新测量OFR幅度时,与对照者仍无差异。我们证实PSP患者的平稳跟踪持续受损;PSP患者在0.7Hz时的组均值跟踪增益为0.29,对照者为0.63。PSP患者和对照者的OFR幅度与平稳跟踪增益之间均未显示出任何相关性。我们提出,OFR未受影响是因为它由依赖于大脑后皮质的低级运动处理产生,而大脑后皮质在PSP中受影响较小。相反,平稳跟踪更多地依赖于从额叶皮质到脑桥核的投射,这两者均参与PSP。严重参与PSP的辅助视通路似乎不太可能对人类的OFR有贡献。