VN - Eyes Move When They Shouldn’t I: Evaluation - Week 7 Flashcards

1
Q

If a patient presents with oscillopsia, what are 6 things you want to find out (not history questions)?

A

What do the eyes do in primary gaze
Effect of disrupting fixation
Effects of convergence
Effects of monocular occlusion
Results of oculomotility
Associated clinical findings

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2
Q

What would you suspect if a patient presents with eyes that keep moving and is asymptomatic?

A

If the patients eyes are moving and has no visual symptoms, it is almost certainly a congenital form of nystagmus

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3
Q

Are congenital forms of nystagmus sinister or benign? Does it require urgent treatment? What about acquired nystagmus?

A

Benign and self-limited
Acquired forms may indicate presence of a potentially fatal condition

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4
Q

Define oscillopsia.

A

Perceived motion of surrounding, stationary world

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5
Q

List 9 questions to help evaluate oscillopsia.

A

What does the patient notice?
Does the world seem to move up-down/side-side or rotate?
Does it affect one or both eyes?
When did it start?
Precipitating factors?
Does it happen at rest or with movement?
Does it occur only in a particular position?
Constant or intermittent?
-how long do episodes last?
Getting better, worse, or the same?

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6
Q

In a patient with oscillopsia, when you ask what a patient notices with their vision, what is it important to do?

A

Ask this question again in each gaze during oculomotility

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7
Q

What is superior oblique myokymia? Describe what causes it and why. What kind of oscillopsia does it cause? What artery can cause compression of the nerve and what is a result of this?

A

An inherently monocular oscillation
Superior oblique may start twitching
Likely due to vascular compression of the 4th nerve root
Causes monocular torsional oscillopsia
Nerve can be compressed by the medial superior cerbellar artery
-pulsatile compression may damage the myelin sheath, leading to mis-transmission of nerve impulses

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8
Q

List 6 drugs that may be used to treat superior oblique myokymia. Are surgical options available?

A

Oxcarbamazine
-better tolerated vs carba
Carbamazepine
Propanolol
Timonal
-eyedrop
Neurontin
Memantine
Surgical decompression may be beneficial

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9
Q

What can nystagmus due to multiple sclerosis be exacerbated by and what happens as a result?

A

If exacerbated by heat, increased nystagmus may lead to worse visual symptoms

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10
Q

When will a purely gaze-evoked nystagmus evoke oscillopsia and what would precipitate the nystagmus?

A

A purely gaze-evoked nystagmus will only evoke oscillopsia when refixation away from primary position brings it on
-gaze position is a precipitating factor

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11
Q

What forms of nystagmus has head position as a precipitating factor? What accompanying symptom would send them to a GP/ENT rather than an optometrist?

A

Some forms of vestibular nystagmus
-accompanying vertigo

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12
Q

Describe how loss of the VOR can cause oscillopsia.

A

Absence of compensatory eye movements results in any head movements taking the eyes with it and causes disturbing motion of the visual environment

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13
Q

Describe whether or not treatment for oscillopsia-inducing nystagmus needs to be 100% effective or not. Note the rough rule of thumb for this.

A

Perfect gaze stabilisation isnt necessary or possible
-fluctuation even in normals
Treatment doesnt need to be 100% effective
-getting slip of image across the retina below 5 degrees/s is enough

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14
Q

What are saccadic oscillations always initiated by?

A

Saccades

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15
Q

What are all forms of nystagmus initiated by? What returns gaze to the desired position?

A

Slow eye movement
-saccades return gaze to desired position (if saccades are present)

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16
Q

List the two major nystagmus waveform categories. One of these has three sub-categories. Note them.

A

Jerk
-linear
-decreasing velocity
-increasing velocity
Pendular

17
Q

What do linear nystagmus waveforms arise from? Generally what region of the nervous system?

A

Arises from tonic imbalance
-generally vesibular, either central or peripheral

18
Q

What do decreasing velocity nystagmus waveforms arise from, what causes this, and how does it affect eye movement? Lesions in what three areas of the brain may cause this? What type of nystagmus is it also seen in?

A

Lack of a step in a pulse-step
-leaky integrator
Eyes drift back centrally
Seen with cerebellar, brainste, or cortical lesions
Also seen in latent/manifest latent nystagmus

19
Q

What do increasing velocity nystagmus waveforms arise from? What is the cause if horizontal? What about vertical (2)?

A

Unstable integrator
If horizontal, it is congenital
If vertical, either congenital or acquired

20
Q

Describe how gaze-evoked and rebound nystagmus occurs. Note which waveform is present (3).

A

Decreasing velocity slow phases arise from mismatch between correctly programmed pulse and inadequate step
The drift towards centre reflects dynamics of the oculomotor structures
Rebound nystagmus arises when sustained lateral gaze resets the brains idea of where straight is

21
Q

Briefly describe acquired periodic alternating nystagmus and what it arises from.

A

A nystagmus that reverses roughly every 90 seconds
Appears to arise from defects in cerebellar component of long-term vestibular adaptive mechanism

22
Q

What is downbeat nystagmus a classic sign of (3)?

A

Cerebellar disease
Drug intoxication
Midbrain damage

23
Q

What can oculopalatal trmor occur in (2)? What is it?

A

Seen in MS or other disorders affecting the medulla
Eyes and soft palate oscillate in unison

24
Q

Can some oscillations consist slely of saccades? Explain.

A

Nystagmus always requires some slow movement to initiate it
Some oscillations can consist solely of saccades
-can not be described as saccadic nystagmus
-called saccadic oscillations

25
Q

True or false
Square wave jerks are never seen in normals

A

False
Almost everyone has them occasionally

26
Q

In who are square wave jerks more likely (3)?

A

Elderly
Cerebellar or cerebral disease

27
Q

What is a square wave oscillation? What is it seen in (2)?

A

Sustained square wave jerk
-seen in PSP and parkinsons

28
Q

What are microsaccadic oscillations notable for? What may it be a sign of?

A

Overshooting intended target
-may be a sign of dorsal cerebellar disease

29
Q

What is psychogenic flutter and what frequency may it exceed?

A

Voluntary nystagmus
Also back to back saccades which look pendular
Requency may exceed 20Hz