Heide W, Kömpf D
Klinik für Neurologie, Medizinische Universität zu Lübeck, Germany.
Exp Brain Res. 1998 Nov;123(1-2):164-71. doi: 10.1007/s002210050558.
Functionally, saccadic eye movements are closely linked to visuo-spatial orientation. Anatomically, the network of cortical areas controlling saccades also seems to be involved in spatial attention and orientation. Consequently, lesions should cause deficits in both categories. We investigated this in 34 patients with focal unilateral lesions of the posterior parietal cortex (PPC), the frontal eye fields (FEF), the supplementary motor area (SMA), or the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (PFC). Saccadic eye movements were recorded using infrared reflection oculography. Visual hemineglect or other visuo-spatial disorders were investigated by a series of standardized paper-pencil tests. Further, the internal spatial coordinates (subjective visual vertical and subjective straight ahead) were assessed psychophysically. Depending on the site of the lesion, different patterns of deficits were identified: lesions of the PPC impaired reflexive exploration of visual space in terms of delayed and hypometric visually triggered saccades into the contralesional hemifield, related to the severity of visual hemineglect. Further, PPC lesions specifically affected basic functions of the perceptual analysis of space, such as the internal spatial coordinates and spatial constancy across saccades. The latter was tested by applying visual double-step stimuli, where saccade-related extraretinal information had to be taken into account for achieving spatial accuracy. Frontal lesions left these functions intact. FEF lesions, however, impaired systematic intentional exploration of space, thus causing an exploratory-motor type of visual hemineglect. Prefrontal (PFC) lesions impaired the working memory for saccade-related spatial information, and SMA lesions affected temporal properties such as the timing of saccadic sequences, but did not cause specific visuo-spatial deficits. In conclusion, patients with frontal or parietal cortical lesions often exhibit combined saccadic and visuo-spatial disorders, most of which are topically specific.
从功能上讲,扫视眼动与视觉空间定向密切相关。在解剖学上,控制扫视的皮质区域网络似乎也参与空间注意力和定向。因此,损伤应该会导致这两类功能出现缺陷。我们对34例患有后顶叶皮质(PPC)、额叶眼区(FEF)、辅助运动区(SMA)或背外侧前额叶皮质(PFC)局灶性单侧损伤的患者进行了研究。使用红外反射眼动图记录扫视眼动。通过一系列标准化的纸笔测试来研究视觉半侧忽视或其他视觉空间障碍。此外,通过心理物理学方法评估内部空间坐标(主观视觉垂直和主观正前方)。根据损伤部位,确定了不同的缺陷模式:PPC损伤在向对侧半视野进行视觉触发扫视时出现延迟和幅度不足,从而损害了对视觉空间的反射性探索,这与视觉半侧忽视的严重程度相关。此外,PPC损伤特别影响空间感知分析的基本功能,如内部空间坐标和扫视过程中的空间恒常性。后者通过应用视觉双步刺激进行测试,在这种刺激中,为了实现空间准确性,必须考虑与扫视相关的视网膜外信息。额叶损伤使这些功能保持完整。然而,FEF损伤损害了对空间的系统性有意探索,从而导致一种探索性运动型视觉半侧忽视。前额叶(PFC)损伤损害了与扫视相关的空间信息的工作记忆,SMA损伤影响诸如扫视序列时间等时间特性,但未导致特定的视觉空间缺陷。总之,额叶或顶叶皮质损伤的患者经常表现出扫视和视觉空间障碍的组合,其中大多数在局部是特定的。