Godaux E, Vanderkelen B
J Physiol. 1984 Jan;346:155-70. doi: 10.1113/jphysiol.1984.sp015013.
The effects of total ablation of the cerebellum on eye movements were studied in alert adult cats. The normal cat could easily hold a steady eye position after a saccadic movement in the dark. The cerebellectomized animal could not: after a saccade the eye position shifted towards a more central position. Vision reduced this 'post-saccadic drift'. The sinusoidal vestibulo-ocular reflex (v.o.r.) was strongly affected by total cerebellectomy. In darkness the v.o.r. gain remained stable at high frequencies (0.5 and 1 Hz) but decreased markedly at lower frequencies to as low as 0.18 at 0.05 Hz. A phase advance (up to 65 degrees at 0.05 Hz) paralleled this gain depression. Velocity characteristics of optokinetic nystagmus (o.k.n.) and optokinetic after-nystagmus (o.k.a.n.) induced by constant-velocity full-field rotation of 60 deg/s amplitude and 60 s duration were studied. The features of o.k.n. (initial velocity, maximal velocity and time constant) were only mildly affected by cerebellectomy. On cessation of visual stimulation when the animal was plunged into darkness, the velocity of the eyes decreased progressively (o.k.a.n.). The time constant of o.k.a.n. was 12.5 s in the normal cat and 4.2 s in the cerebellectomized cat. Furthermore cerebellectomy abolished the secondary o.k.a.n. Optokinetic response was also tested by a set of sinusoidal (0.05-1 Hz; 3-20 degrees) full-field stimuli. The o.k.n. was not abolished but dramatically decreased, especially at higher frequencies. No response could be detected above 0.15 Hz. Visual suppression of inappropriate vestibulo-ocular reflex was still possible but was mildly impaired after cerebellectomy. Visual suppression could only be detected with stimuli below 0.25 Hz. Visual suppression of caloric nystagmus was studied in the normal cat. A clear dependence of the effectiveness of visual suppression on the velocity of the nystagmus was demonstrated. In the cerebellectomized cat, the visual suppression of caloric nystagmus was lost when tested on nystagmus velocities above 20 deg/s but remained when tested on nystagmus velocities below 20 deg/s. The relationship between cerebellectomy and the loss of visual suppression of caloric nystagmus was found to be at least partially indirect: cerebellectomy increased the velocity of caloric nystagmus, and visual suppression was usually less effective at higher velocities.
在清醒的成年猫中研究了小脑完全切除对眼球运动的影响。正常猫在黑暗中进行扫视运动后能够轻松保持稳定的眼球位置。小脑切除的动物则不能:扫视运动后,眼球位置会向更中心的位置偏移。视觉可减少这种“扫视后漂移”。完全小脑切除对正弦前庭眼反射(VOR)有强烈影响。在黑暗中,VOR增益在高频(0.5和1Hz)时保持稳定,但在低频时显著下降,在0.05Hz时低至0.18。相位超前(在0.05Hz时高达65度)与这种增益降低平行。研究了由幅度为60度/秒、持续时间为60秒的等速全场旋转诱发的视动性眼震(OKN)和视动性后眼震(OKAN)的速度特性。OKN的特征(初始速度、最大速度和时间常数)仅受到小脑切除的轻微影响。当动物进入黑暗中停止视觉刺激时,眼球速度逐渐下降(OKAN)。正常猫OKAN的时间常数为12.5秒,小脑切除的猫为4.2秒。此外,小脑切除消除了继发性OKAN。还通过一组正弦(0.05 - 1Hz;3 - 20度)全场刺激测试了视动反应。OKN未被消除,但显著下降,尤其是在较高频率时。在0.15Hz以上未检测到反应。对视性前庭眼反射的视觉抑制仍然可能,但在小脑切除后略有受损。仅在低于0.25Hz的刺激下才能检测到视觉抑制。在正常猫中研究了对视性冷热眼震的视觉抑制。证明了视觉抑制的有效性对视性冷热眼震速度有明显依赖性。在小脑切除的猫中,当对视性冷热眼震速度高于20度/秒进行测试时,对视性冷热眼震的视觉抑制消失,但当对视性冷热眼震速度低于20度/秒进行测试时,视觉抑制仍然存在。发现小脑切除与对视性冷热眼震视觉抑制丧失之间的关系至少部分是间接的:小脑切除增加了对视性冷热眼震的速度,而视觉抑制在较高速度时通常效果较差。