Neuroscience Oculomotor Function Michael L. Vertino Flashcards

1
Q

What are movements that bring objects of interest to the fovea called?

A

Saccades

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2
Q

What eye movements change the plane of focus?

A

Vergence and accomodation

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3
Q

What eye movements steady the scene against movement?

A

Vestibular-ocular reflex (VOR) and (OKN)

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4
Q

The scene, deciding what saccades are needed, happens in what part of the brain?

A

Diencephalon, forebrain

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5
Q

The generation of saccades happens in what part of the brain?

A

Brainstem (ish)

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6
Q

Where is the vertical saccade generator?

A

Midbrain

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7
Q

Where is the horizontal saccade generator?

A

At junction of pons and medulla

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8
Q

What nuclei are located in the medulla?

A

Vestibular

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9
Q

What is oculomotor apraxia? What nuclei remains intact?

A

You move your head because you can’t move your eyes. Probably a 3 and 6 issue. Vestibular nuclei remains intact.

  • -Absence of fast phase nystagmus on horizontal optokinetic testing
  • -Problems in nerve function involved in eye movement control, called neuropathy
  • -Inability to visually follow objects
  • -Head thrusts to compensate for the inability to accomplish voluntary horizontal gaze
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10
Q

What happens in the pterygopontine reticular formation (PPRF)?

A

6 and 3 come together

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11
Q

What is left CN VI palsy?

A

Weakness of left cn 6. Eye turned inwards, double vision, other symptoms possible depending on where lesion is

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12
Q

Where are the inhibitory bursters, traveling from horizontal premotor areas in the pons to the CN VI nucleus?

A

Medulla

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13
Q

What occurs in internuclear ophthalmoplegia?

A
Convergence OK
Slow adduction to one side
Lesion of the MLF
Nystagmus when eye abducts
Can be bilateral or not
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14
Q

What causes slow saccades?

A

Lose burster activity, partial burster loss

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15
Q

If the integrator of burst information in the cerebellum is damaged, what symptoms are seen?

A

Nystagmus, no ability for tonic response and holding that response, thus in double nystagmus, eyes can’t hold position

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16
Q

Opsoclonus from loss of:

A

trigger, manic random opsoclonus (tragic)

17
Q

“The scene” is made up of:

A
  1. Visual signals
  2. Eye position signals
    1 and 2 converge and decide the size of saccade needed
18
Q

“The move” is made up of:

A

Saccade generator –> Plant right and plant left (two separate chains)