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Issue 1004 coverTHE OCULOMOTOR AND VESTIBULAR SYSTEMS: THEIR FUNCTION AND DISORDERS Volume 1004 published December 2003
Ann. N.Y. Acad. Sci. 1004: 337 (2003). doi: 10.1196/annals.1303.031
Copyright © 2003 by the New York Academy of Sciences
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Articles by GARBUTT, S.
Articles by LEIGH, R. J.
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Articles by GARBUTT, S.
Articles by LEIGH, R. J.
Evaluating Small Eye Movements in Patients with Saccadic Palsies

SIOBHAN GARBUTTa, MARK R. HARWOODb, ARUN N. KUMARa, YANNING H. HANa AND R. JOHN LEIGHa

aNeurology Service, Veterans Affairs Medical Center and Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio, USA
bCity College of the City University of New York, New York, USA

Address for correspondence: R. John Leigh, Neurology Service, Veterans Affairs Medical Center and Department of Neurology, University Hospitals, 11100 Euclid Avenue, Cleveland, OH 44106-5040. Voice: 216-844-3190; fax: 216-231-3461.
rjl4{at}po.cwru.edu
Ann. N.Y. Acad. Sci. 1004: 337-346 (2003).

Slow saccades are an important diagnostic feature of a range of degenerative, metabolic, and genetic diseases of the nervous system. Many affected patients have difficulty initiating saccades, and the movements themselves may be small, making it difficult to make comparisons with control subjects. A large-field optokinetic stimulus may elicit quick phases of nystagmus in patients who cannot initiate voluntary saccades, but these movements may also be small. We show that it is still possible to compare amplitude-duration and amplitude-peak velocity relations with controls if data are fit with a power function (rather than an exponential equation). When analyzed this way, the dynamic properties of small saccades and quick phases from patients with progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP) could be differentiated from fast movements made by patients with idiopathic Parkinson's disease or controls. Normal saccades show a fairly constant ratio: peak velocity/mean velocity (Q ~1.6 for vertical saccades). This ratio was abnormally high (Q >3) for some larger saccades made by patients with PSP, suggesting that either these movements were not entirely saccadic or that they were composed of a series of small saccades.

Key Words: saccades • quick phases • Parkinson's disease • progressive supranuclear palsy




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