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THE TOP TEN THINGS YOU SHOULD KNOW ABOUT THE OCULOMOTOR SYSTEM

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Presentation on theme: "THE TOP TEN THINGS YOU SHOULD KNOW ABOUT THE OCULOMOTOR SYSTEM"— Presentation transcript:

1 THE TOP TEN THINGS YOU SHOULD KNOW ABOUT THE OCULOMOTOR SYSTEM

2 10. Movements of the eyes are produced by six extra-ocular muscles
10. Movements of the eyes are produced by six extra-ocular muscles. If they, or the neural pathways controlling them, are not functioning normally, eye movements are abnormal. Video OF Duane’s Video of Opsoclonus Additionally, accommodation and pupillary responses are produced by intraocular muscles

3 Meet the muscles

4 Meet the muscles (Cont.)

5 9. The stretch reflex is absent
9. The stretch reflex is absent. Gently press on your eye and you’ll see the world move. Proprioceptive feedback from the extra-ocular muscles is not used to keep track of eye position. The brain keeps track of eye position by keeping track of the signals sent to the motoneurons that innervate the extra-ocular muscles. This is known as efference copy or corollary discharge.

6 8. Except for changes in viewing distance, normal eye movements are yoked.
Yoking: the eyes move the same amount in the same direction. Vertical eye movements are normally always yoked. Projections from the abducens nucleus to medial rectus motoneurons by way of the medial longitudinal fasciculus provides the basis for horizontal yoking. During convergence, the eyes move equal amounts in opposite directions.

7 MVN - Medial vestibular nucleus NPH - Nucleus prepositus hypoglossi
EBN - Excitatory burst neuron IBN - Inhibitory burst neuron VIDEO SHOWING INTERNUCLEAR OPHTHALMOPLEGIA Excitatory Inhibitory

8 7. Eye movements are controlled by distinct neurological subsystems.
Eye movements stabilize the image of the external world on the retina Eye movements bring images of objects of interest onto the fovea

9 FUNCTIONAL CLASSES OF EYE MOVEMENTS Extra-ocular muscles

10 FUNCTIONAL CLASSES OF EYE MOVEMENTS

11 6. Vestibular responses. You can’t read without them.

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14 VOR gain is low at low frequencies

15 Vestibulo-ocular reflex
MVN - Medial vestibular nucleus NPH - Nucleus prepositus hypoglossi EBN - Excitatory burst neuron IBN - Inhibitory burst neuron Excitatory Increased firing rate with rightward head turns Inhibitory

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17 FUNCTIONAL CLASSES OF EYE MOVEMENTS Extra-ocular muscles

18 5. Optokinetic responses. The world drifts without them.

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22 VESTIBULAR NUCLEUS NEURON
A. ROTATION IN DARKNESS (Vestibular but no Optokinetic) B. ROTATION IN LIGHT (Vestibular and Optokinetic) C. NO ROTATION. OPTIC FLOW. (Optokinetic but no Vestibular)

23 Vestibular-optokinetic interactions
Schematic summary of vestibular-optokinetic interaction occurring in response to velocity-step rotations. Graphs on the left show characteristics of the stimulus (head velocity during rotation or drum velocity during optokinetic stimulation); graphs on the right show the responses (slow-phase eye velocity, quick phases having been removed). R, right; L, left; t, time. In the top panel, constant-velocity rotation to the left in the dark produces slow-phase movements to the right (per-rotatory nystagmus, RN) with initial eye velocities equal to head velocity (VOR gain = 1.0). When rotation stops, nystagmus starts in the opposite direction (postrotatory nystagmus, PRN). In the middle panel, an optokinetic stimulus (drum rotation to the right) causes a sustained optokinetic nystagmus (OKN), with slow phases to the right during the entire period of stimulation. When the lights are turned off during stimulation, eye movements do not stop immediately but persist as optokinetic after-nystagmus (OKAN). In the lower panel, the subject is rotated in the light (natural situation of self-rotation). This gives a combined vestibular and optokinetic stimulus. The response is a sustained nystagmus. When the chair stops rotating, eye movements stop nearly completely: postrotatory nystagmus is suppressed by the opposite-directed optokinetic after-nystagmus and by visual fixation of the stationary world.

24 FUNCTIONAL CLASSES OF EYE MOVEMENTS Extra-ocular muscles

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26 FAST - 40-90 MS IN TOTAL DURATION
4. Saccadic eye movements. You can’t look at anything interesting without them. FAST MS IN TOTAL DURATION BALLISTIC B A

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29 Right Medial Rectus Motoneuron - Saccades

30 Horizontal saccades are generated in the paramedian pontine reticular formation (PPRF)
VERTICAL SACCADES ARE GENERATED HERE Vertical saccades are generated in the rostral interstitial nucleus of the medial longitudinal fasciculus (riMLF)

31 MVN - Medial vestibular nucleus NPH - Nucleus prepositus hypoglossi
Increased firing rate with rightward head turns Excitatory Inhibitory MVN - Medial vestibular nucleus NPH - Nucleus prepositus hypoglossi EBN - Excitatory burst neuron IBN - Inhibitory burst neuron

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33 Burst size proportional
to saccade size OMNIPAUSE NEURON (OPN) NI - Neural Integrator EBN

34 Excitatory burst neuron- small saccade

35 Excitatory burst neuron- medium saccade

36 Excitatory burst neuron - large saccade

37

38 Omnipause neuron - various saccades

39 Burst size proportional
to saccade size OMNIPAUSE NEURON (OPN) NI - Neural Integrator EBN

40 THE SUPERIOR COLLICULUS
PROJECTS TO THE PPRF 2-D map of contralateral saccades

41 SUPERIOR COLLICULUS MOTOR MAP

42 A block diagram of the major structures that project to the brain stem saccade generator (premotor burst neurons in PPRF and riMLF). Also shown are projections from cortical eye fields to superior colliculus. FEF, frontal eye fields; SEF, supplementary eye fields; DLPC, dorsolateral prefrontal cortex; IML, intramedullary lamina of thalamus; PEF, parietal eye fields (LIP); PPC, posterior parietal cortex; SNpr, substantia nigra, pars reticulata. Not shown are the pulvinar, which has connections with the superior colliculus and both the frontal and parietal lobes, and certain projections, such as that from the superior colliculus to nucleus reticularis tegmenti pontis (NRTP).

43 Disorders of the saccadic pulse and step
Disorders of the saccadic pulse and step. Innervation patterns are shown on the left, eye movements on the right. Dashed lines indicate the normal response. (A) Normal saccade. (B) Hypometric saccade: pulse amplitude (width ´ height) is too small but pulse and step are matched appropriately. (C) Slow saccade: decreased pulse height with normal pulse amplitude and normal pulse-step match. (D) Gaze-evoked nystagmus: normal pulse, poorly sustained step. (E) Pulse-step mismatch (glissade): step is relatively smaller than pulse. (F) Pulse-step mismatch due to internuclear ophthalmoplegia (INO): the step is larger than the pulse, and so the eye drifts onward after the initial rapid movement. Experimental cerebellectomy completely abolishes the adaptive capability-for both the pulse size and the pulse-step match.296 Monkeys with lesions restricted to the dorsal cerebellar vermis cannot adapt the size of the saccadic pulse; they have pulse-size dysmetria .416,416a On the other hand, monkeys with floccular lesions cannot match the saccadic step to the pulse to eliminate pulse-step mismatch dysmetria.298 This evidence suggests that the repair of conjugate saccadic dysmetria is mediated by two different cerebellar structures: the dorsal cerebellar vermis and the fastigial nuclei control pulse size, and the flocculus and paraflocculus control the pulse-step match.

44 FUNCTIONAL CLASSES OF EYE MOVEMENTS Extra-ocular muscles

45 Visual cue: retinal slip velocity of visual target.
Smooth pursuit: Tracking eye movements - conjugate. Velocity of visual target Visual cue: retinal slip velocity of visual target. B A B A B A

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47 3. Smooth pursuit eye movements
3. Smooth pursuit eye movements. You can’t track anything interesting without them Smooth pursuit: Tracking eye movements - conjugate. Velocity of visual target. Slow. Visual cue: retinal slip velocity of visual target.

48 SMOOTH PURSUIT PATHWAYS

49 FUNCTIONAL CLASSES OF EYE MOVEMENTS Extra-ocular muscles

50 2. Vergence. Without it, you can’t get a closer look.
Vergence: Eye movements in depth. Disconjugate - left and right eyes move in opposite directions. A B B B A A

51 Far viewing Accommodation and convergence Near target
Blurred images fall on non-corresponding retinal locations - blur and disparity signals Eyes converge and lenses focus - reduced blur and disparity signals

52 Accommodation and accommodative convergence
Far viewing Near target Accommodation and accommodative convergence F F F F F F Eyes change focus - reduced blur signal. Also accommodative convergence Blurred images fall on retina - blur signal

53 2-D map of saccades

54 MVN - Medial vestibular nucleus NPH - Nucleus prepositus hypoglossi
EBN - Excitatory burst neuron IBN - Inhibitory burst neuron Excitatory Increased firing rate with rightward head turns Inhibitory

55 Internuclear ophthalmoplegia - adduction during convergence is not reduced

56 FUNCTIONAL CLASSES OF EYE MOVEMENTS

57 Pupillary light reflex

58 Pupillary light reflex
Direct Consensual

59 Pupillary light reflex
Direct Consensual

60 Pupillary light reflex
Direct Consensual

61 Pupillary light reflex
Direct Consensual

62 1. Pupillary light reflex. If it’s absent, there’s a problem.
AFFERENT DEFECTS: PUPILS APPROX. EQUAL IN SIZE. BUT RESPONSE TO LIGHT IN ONE EYE IS LESS THAN THE RESPONSE TO LIGHT IN THE OTHER EYE. EFFERENT DEFECTS: PUPILS MAY BE OF DIFFERENT SIZES (ANISOCORIA). PUPIL OF ONE EYE REACTS MORE TO LIGHT IN EITHER EYE THAN THE PUPIL OF THE OTHER EYE TO LIGHT IN EITHER EYE.

63 Pupillary light reflex: Afferent deficit

64 Pupillary light reflex: Afferent deficit
Neutral Density Filter (0.5 log unit) 0.5 log unit Relative Afferent Pupillary Deficit (RAPD)

65 Pupillary light reflex: Efferent deficit

66 TOP TEN LIST 1. Pupillary light reflex. If it’s absent, there’s a problem. 2. Vergence. Without it, you can’t get a closer look. 3. Smooth pursuit eye movements. You can’t track anything interesting without them 4. Saccadic eye movements. You can’t look at anything interesting without them. 5. Optokinetic responses. The world drifts without them. 6. Vestibular responses. You can’t read without them. 7. Eye movements are controlled by distinct neurological subsystems. 8. Except for changes in viewing distance, normal eye movements are yoked. 9. The stretch reflex is absent. Gently press on your eye and you’ll see the world move. 10. Movements of the eyes are produced by six extra-ocular muscles. If they, or the neural pathways controlling them, are not functioning normally, eye movements are abnormal.


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