Centre for Vestibular and Behavioural Neurosciences, Department of Clinical and Movement Neurosciences, UCL Queen Square Institute of Neurology, London, UK.
Department of Clinical and Movement Neurosciences, UCL Queen Square Institute of Neurology, University College London, London, UK.
J Neurol Sci. 2022 Dec 15;443:120482. doi: 10.1016/j.jns.2022.120482. Epub 2022 Oct 28.
Saccades, rapid movements of the eyes towards a visual or remembered target, are useful in understanding the healthy brain and the pathology of neurological conditions such as progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP). We set out to investigate the parameters of horizontal reflexive and volitional saccades, both visually guided and memory-guided, over a 1 min epoch in healthy individuals and PSP patients.
An experimental paradigm tested reflexive, volitional visually guided, and volitional memory-guided saccades in young healthy controls (n = 14; 20-31 years), PSP patients (n = 11; 46-75 years) and older age-matched healthy controls (n = 6; 56-71 years). The accuracy and velocity of saccades was recorded using an EyeBrain T2® video eye tracker and analyses performed using the MyEyeAnalysis® software. Two-way analysis of variance (ANOVA) was used to identify significant effects (p < 0.01) between young and older controls to investigate the effects of ageing upon saccades, and between PSP patients and age-matched controls to study the effects of PSP upon saccades.
In both healthy individuals and PSP patients, volitional saccades are slower and less accurate than reflexive saccades. In PSP patients, accuracy is lower across all saccade types compared to age-matched controls, but velocity is lower only for reflexive saccades. Crucially, there is no change in accuracy or velocity of consecutive saccades over short (one-minute) timescales in controls or PSP patients.
Velocity and accuracy of saccades in PSP does not decrease over one-minute timescales, contrary to that previously observed in Parkinson's Disease (PD), suggesting a potential clinical biomarker for the distinction of PSP from PD.
扫视,即眼球快速移动至视觉或记忆中的目标,对于理解健康大脑以及神经退行性疾病(如进行性核上性麻痹,PSP)的病理学具有重要意义。我们旨在研究健康个体和 PSP 患者在 1 分钟时间内水平反射性和随意性扫视的参数,包括视觉引导和记忆引导的扫视。
实验范式测试了年轻健康对照组(n=14;20-31 岁)、PSP 患者(n=11;46-75 岁)和年龄匹配的健康对照组(n=6;56-71 岁)的反射性、随意性视觉引导和随意性记忆引导的扫视。使用 EyeBrain T2®视频眼动追踪器记录扫视的准确性和速度,并使用 MyEyeAnalysis®软件进行分析。使用双向方差分析(ANOVA)来识别年轻和年长对照组之间的显著影响(p<0.01),以研究年龄对视动的影响,以及 PSP 患者与年龄匹配对照组之间的显著影响(p<0.01),以研究 PSP 对视动的影响。
在健康个体和 PSP 患者中,随意性扫视比反射性扫视更慢且准确性更低。在 PSP 患者中,与年龄匹配的对照组相比,所有扫视类型的准确性都较低,但仅反射性扫视的速度较低。至关重要的是,在健康对照组或 PSP 患者中,在短时间(1 分钟)内,连续扫视的准确性或速度没有变化。
PSP 患者的扫视速度和准确性在 1 分钟时间内不会下降,这与之前在帕金森病(PD)中观察到的情况相反,这表明这可能是区分 PSP 和 PD 的潜在临床生物标志物。