Nystagmus Flashcards
what is nystagmus
Rhythmic oscillation of one or both eyes
what 3 things can nystagmus be categorized as
- Physiological or pathological
- Congenital or acquired
- Manifest or latent
what 4 types of orientation can nystagmus occur in and which is the most common
Horizontal, vertical, torsional or a combination
Most commonly horizontal
what type of nystagmus is a combination of horizontal, vertical, torsional a symptom of
neurological type nystagmus
what is a manifest nystagmus
one that is seen all the time
what is a latent nystagmus
one that is only seen when you cover one eye
list the 4 types of physiological nystagmus
- Opto-kinetic (OKN)
Response to a moving scene (train) - Vestibular (VOR)
Response to rotation of the head (light and dark) - End point
In extreme lateral gaze - Voluntary
5% of the normal population can produce a nystagmus
what is seen in the physiological Opto-kinetic (OKN) type nystagmus
a jerk nystagmus, which shows a resetting nystagmus movement e.g. in response to a moving scene (train)
what is seen in the physiological vestibular (VOR) type nystagmus
from spinning on a char and when stopping still, the world is still spinning e.g. in response to rotation of the head
list the 3 types of pathological nystagmus
- Benign idiopathic (congenital) - never find the cause
- secondary to a underlying visual deficit
Eg albinism = no foveal reflex
Retinal dystrophies = congenital - secondary to neurological deficit
Intra-cranial lesions = strokes etc, have acquired the nystagmus
Drug toxicities = alcohol etc
what are the waveforms of nystagmus often only revealed by
electronystagmography
what are the 2 forms of waveforms of nystagmus and describe each one
- Jerk
A slow phase (pathological) and fast phase (refixation); described by direction of saccade e.g. right beat; upbeat; downbeat - Pendular
No fast phase - sinusoidal
which part of the jerk nystagmus revels the direction of the saccade
the normal phase which is the fast phase e.g. if looking at the extreme right gaze and the eyes are drifting to the center and then got a quick flick back to the right = a right beating nystagmus
describe a jerk type nystagmus
A slow drift off the target, followed by a rapid corrective movement
describe a pendular nystagmus
Smooth oscillations = no fast and slow phase and instead just has a gentle sinusoidal pattern which are same at both directions of gaze
if not jerk or pendular, what else can a waveform be and what may a waveform of nystagmus vary with
- May be complex and combinations of jerk/pendular
- May vary with gaze direction
list and explain the 3 terminologies that describes a nystagmus
- Amplitude
The ‘excursion’ of the nystagmus
i.e. how far it moves which varies from small excursions to large excursions - Frequency
Number of oscillations per minute
‘coarse, medium or fine’
i.e. if very slow drifting or very fast etc - Intensity
Amplitude x frequency
what is important about the intensity of a nystagmus
i.e. the amplitude x frequency
is an important predictor of visual acuity, as everyone with nystagmus has poor visual acuity because the image isn’t always on the fovea
what is the phrase that describes the amount of time the image is on the fovea
foveation time
what makes the visual acuity better in terms of intensity of the nystagmus
- a longer foveation time
- such as slow and small excursions
- if the amplitude = the longer the time the image is on the fovea, then the better the vision
- but large amplitudes with slow excursions = less foveating time and worse acuity
what is a manifest type of nystagmus and describe what happens
When both eyes are open may increase when one eye is covered, but the nystagmus is always there when both eyes are open
what is a latent type of nystagmus and describe what happens, what is this type of nystagmus also a result of
- only seen when one eye is covered, steady fixation with BEO
- The result of an early insult to binocular vision
Eg unilateral cataract, early onset squint
when does Congenital / Early Onset Nystagmus occur
- from 2/3 months and less than 6 months of age
- so not at birth
what are the 2 primary forms of Congenital / Early Onset Nystagmus and what is it not possible to do with these
- sensory deficit nystagmus (SDN)
- congenital idiopathic nystagmus (CIN)
- not possible to differentiate SDN/CIN from clinical observation of nystagmus i.e. cant tell if px has got one or another just by looking that them and so they need to have a proper investigation e/h/ from electrophysiology test or a scan, to find out whether its a underlying pathology or if its an idiopathic type nystagmus
what is the aetiology of congenital idiopathic nystagmus (CIN)
- Unknown - maybe something wrong with the neural integrator (the thing that holds the eye movements when gazing)
- May be x-linked, autosomal dominant or sporadic
- there is no ocular pathology present and so the diagnosis of this type of nystagmus is only made if nothing else is wrong
what is the aetiology of sensory deficit nystagmus (SDN)and what is needed to be done to find this
- due to early macular deprivatione.g. dense bilateral congenital cataracts, retinal cone dysfunction, albinism (oculo-cutaneous or purely ocular)
- Careful examination fundus and media and electro diagnostic testing