Nystagmus Flashcards
1
Q
Features of infantile nystagmus
A
- uniplanar
- near Vision better
- worse in distance
- less for near
- head posture
- null position (point of lest amplitude)
- head nodding to cancel out movement
- neutral point is reversal point
- no oscillopsia
- no vertigo
2
Q
Other causes of nystagmus
A
- albinism
- rod defects
- achromatopsia
- rods and cones - lebers amaurosis
- optic nerve hypoplasia
- achiasma
- methodone
3
Q
Surgical treatment of nystagmus
A
Head posture
- end gaze blocking
- 4 muscles recess/resect
- move null position
4
Q
Adapting to low vision with nystagmus
A
- optical correction
- educational material visible
- work within communication distance for facial expression
- phone camera
5
Q
Causes of early onset aquired nystagmus
A
- optic chaism tumours
- posterior fossa tumours
6
Q
Nystagmus phases
A
- Slow phase - eyes drift away from fixation point slowly
- Rapid phase - saccadic movement back to fixation point
Described by:
- Amplitude (how far eyes move) - coarse or fine
- Frequency (how fast eyes move) - low, moderate, high
7
Q
Nystagmus eye movements
A
- Jerk
- Slow drift, fast saccadic correction (zig-zag)
- Pendular (most common)
- Non-saccadic in both directions, slow (squiggly line)
- Mixed
- Different eye movement on different positions of gaze
- e.g. pendular in primary position and jerk on lateral gaze
8
Q
Nystagmus types and causes
A
- See-Saw (vertical nystagmus where one eye goes up and the other goes down)
- Midbrain lesions
- Pituitary tumours
- Severe visual loss
- Downbeat (eye drifts up slowly and then a quick down motion to the centre)
- Cerebellum lesions
- Medulla lesions
- Idiopathic
- Upbeat (eye drifts down slowly and then a quick up motion to the centre)
- Medullary lesions
- Cerebellum lesions
- Benign positional paroxysmal vertigo
- Abducting nystagmus of INO
- Demyelination
- Brainstem stroke
- Periodic Alternating (alternating eye movement)
- Arnold-Chiari
- Demyelination
- Trauma
- Encephalitis
- Syphilis
- Posterior fossa tumours
- Visual deprivation
- Pendular nystagmus
- Demyelination
- INO
- Brain stem dysfunction
- Spasmus Nutans
- Idiopathic in children
- Glioma
- Gaze-evoked (no nystagmus in primary position but when px moves their eyes they can get nystagmus in other positions of gaze
- Drugs
- Alcohol