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Clinical Correlate: Clinical Correlate: Examination of Examination of Nystagmus Nystagmus Najwa Al-Bustani Najwa Al-Bustani Neurology AHD Neurology AHD July 20-2011 July 20-2011

Clinical Correlate: Examination of Nystagmus

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Clinical Correlate: Examination of Nystagmus. Najwa Al-Bustani Neurology AHD July 20-2011. Objectives:. Define Nystagmus. How to describe Nystagmus. Types. Physiological & Physilogical Nystagmus. What is Nystagmus ?. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Clinical Correlate: Examination of Nystagmus

Clinical Correlate:Clinical Correlate:Examination of Examination of

NystagmusNystagmus

Najwa Al-BustaniNajwa Al-Bustani

Neurology AHDNeurology AHD

July 20-2011July 20-2011

Page 2: Clinical Correlate: Examination of Nystagmus

Objectives:Objectives:

Define Nystagmus.

How to describe Nystagmus.

Types.

Physiological & Physilogical Nystagmus.

Page 3: Clinical Correlate: Examination of Nystagmus

What is Nystagmus ?What is Nystagmus ?

A repetitive rhythmic involuntary oscillation of the eyes that is usually conjugate.

Biphasic ocular oscillation containing slow eye movement that are responsible for its genesis and continuation.

Page 4: Clinical Correlate: Examination of Nystagmus

How to describe How to describe Nystagmus ?Nystagmus ?

Page 5: Clinical Correlate: Examination of Nystagmus

WaveformsWaveforms::1. Jerk (most common): slow drift ‘slow

phase’ followed by quick reset ‘quick phase’.

Slow phase waveforms can be:a) Increasing velocity exponential =

congenital.b) Decreasing velocity exponential = gaze-

evoked.c) Constant (linear) velocity = vestibular.

2. Pendular: sinusoidal oscillation ‘like pendulum’, phases have equal speed.

Page 6: Clinical Correlate: Examination of Nystagmus

WaveformsWaveforms::

Page 7: Clinical Correlate: Examination of Nystagmus

TrajectorTrajectory:y:

Horizontal.

Vertical.

Torsional.

Combination of all three.

Page 8: Clinical Correlate: Examination of Nystagmus

Direction:Direction:

Usually defined by its fast phase.

Conjugacy:Conjugacy:Conjugate: both eyes move in

same direction.Disconjugate: eyes move in

different direction >> disjunctive.

Page 9: Clinical Correlate: Examination of Nystagmus

Alexander’s law:Alexander’s law:

Jerk nystagmus usually increases in intensity when looking in the direction of the fast phase.

Null zone:Null zone:

The field of gaze where nystagmus intensity is minimal.

Page 10: Clinical Correlate: Examination of Nystagmus

Grading of jerk Nystagmus:Grading of jerk Nystagmus:

Grade 1: present only when looking in the direction of the quick component.

Grade 2 : also present when looking straight ahead.

    Grade 3 : present when looking in the

direction of the quick component, when looking straight ahead and when looking in the direction of the slow component.

Page 11: Clinical Correlate: Examination of Nystagmus

Not all Nystagmus is Not all Nystagmus is PathologicalPathological

Page 12: Clinical Correlate: Examination of Nystagmus

Physiologic Physiologic Nystagmus:Nystagmus:End-position: few beats of

horizontal nystagmus when the eyes are first moved to extreme horizontal positions in the orbit.

Page 13: Clinical Correlate: Examination of Nystagmus

Vestibular Nystagmus:Vestibular Nystagmus:

1. Caloric Nystagmus: Irrigation with worm water (in the head

up supine position) causes endolymph in the horizontal canal to move toward the ampulla, exciting the hair cells & driving a slow phase eye movement away from the irrigated side.

Cold water: inhibits the horizontal canal, produce slow phase toward the irrigated side.

Page 14: Clinical Correlate: Examination of Nystagmus

Vestibular Nystagmus:Vestibular Nystagmus:

2. Rotational Nystagmus (VOR): Prolonged head rotation

produces a slow phase in the direction opposite to the head movement interrupted by quick phases in the same direction as head movement.

This serves to stabilize retinal images as head moves.

Page 15: Clinical Correlate: Examination of Nystagmus

Optokinetic Nystagmus:Optokinetic Nystagmus:Driven by prolonged full-field

visual motion.

Supplements the VOR to stabilize vision.

Page 16: Clinical Correlate: Examination of Nystagmus

Pathological Pathological NystagmusNystagmus

Page 17: Clinical Correlate: Examination of Nystagmus

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yo-zA1CuKUI&feature=related

38 year old female, c/o vomiting X few hours.

? left earache and tinnitis.

Page 18: Clinical Correlate: Examination of Nystagmus

Peripheral Vestibular Peripheral Vestibular Nystagmus:Nystagmus:

Jerk nystagmus due to imbalance of vestibular inputs.

Page 19: Clinical Correlate: Examination of Nystagmus

Unilateral Vestibular Unilateral Vestibular hypofunction:hypofunction:

Acute lesion to one labyrinth or vestibular nerve >> spontaneous horizontal/torsional nystagmus.

Because of the tonic input from the intact side is suddenly unopposed.

Page 20: Clinical Correlate: Examination of Nystagmus

Unilateral Vestibular Unilateral Vestibular hypofunction:hypofunction:The eyes drift (slow phase) toward

the lesioned side and quick phase beat toward the intact side.

The intensity usually greatest when looking toward the intact side (Alexander’s law).

Direction does not change with gaze, unlike gaze-evoked nystagmus.

Page 21: Clinical Correlate: Examination of Nystagmus

Unilateral Vestibular Unilateral Vestibular hypofunction:hypofunction:May be partially or fully

suppressed by vision and is best seen when fixation is removed:

I. Frenzel goggles.

I. When looking at one optic nerve with direct ophthalmoscope, cover the fellow eye.

Page 22: Clinical Correlate: Examination of Nystagmus

Vestibular Vestibular hypofunction:hypofunction:

Bilateral vestibular lesions do not cause nystagmus because the lesion is symmetric and there is no imbalance.

Page 23: Clinical Correlate: Examination of Nystagmus

Bruns NystagmusBruns Nystagmus

Rt. Lt.Primary position

Page 24: Clinical Correlate: Examination of Nystagmus

Bruns Nystagmus:Bruns Nystagmus:

May be seen in large tumors in the CP angle.

2 components:Horizontal nystagmus beating

away from the lesion when looking away from the lesion (vestibular nystagmus-accentuated by Alexander’s law) due to vestibular nerve involvement.

Page 25: Clinical Correlate: Examination of Nystagmus

Bruns’ Nystagmus:Bruns’ Nystagmus:

Horizontal nystagmus beating toward the lesion when looking toward the lesion (unilateral gaze-evoked nystagmus) due to compression of the adjacent brainstem and cerebellar flocculus.

Page 26: Clinical Correlate: Examination of Nystagmus

Benign Paroxysmal Benign Paroxysmal Positional Nystagmus Positional Nystagmus (BPPN):(BPPN):Brief (<1min) nystagmus provoked by

changes in head position relative to gravity.

Caused by free-moving otoconia that have become lodged in a semicircular canal.

Usually affects the posterior canal: slow phase directed downward with a torsional component in which the upper pole of the eyes rotate away from the affected ear (upbeating-torsional nystagmus).

Page 27: Clinical Correlate: Examination of Nystagmus

Benign Paroxysmal Benign Paroxysmal Positional Nystagmus Positional Nystagmus (BPPN):(BPPN):

Diagnosed by Dix-Hallpike maneuver.

Treated by repositioning maneuvers (Epley) that move the otoconia out of the affected canal.

Page 28: Clinical Correlate: Examination of Nystagmus

Dix-Hallpike maneuver: Dix-Hallpike maneuver: Rt. Ear.Rt. Ear.

Page 29: Clinical Correlate: Examination of Nystagmus

Epley ManeuverEpley Maneuver

Page 30: Clinical Correlate: Examination of Nystagmus

Congenital Nystagmus:Congenital Nystagmus:

May be present at birth, more commonly appears later in infancy.

Sporadic or Genetic: AD (6p12), AR, X-linked recessive.

Associated with oculocutaneous albinism.

Commonly accentuated by attempted fixation or anxiety.

Typically damped by eye closure, sleep & convergence.

Page 31: Clinical Correlate: Examination of Nystagmus

Congenital Nystagmus:Congenital Nystagmus:

Does not cause oscillopsia.

Distinct waveforms:

a)Conjugate horizontal-torsional pendular and/or jerk nystagmus.

b)Similar amplitude in both eye.c)Jerk nystagmus has increasing

velocity slow phases.

Page 32: Clinical Correlate: Examination of Nystagmus

Congenital Nystagmus:Congenital Nystagmus:

Foveation periods: brief cessation of eye motion, often following quick phases, during which clear vision is possible (if there are no afferent visual abnormalities).

There is often orbital position (null point) where nystagmus is minimal and vision is best.

Page 33: Clinical Correlate: Examination of Nystagmus

Congenital Nystagmus:Congenital Nystagmus:

May be associated with other abnormalitis:

Strabismus, latent nystagmus, head oscillations.

Page 34: Clinical Correlate: Examination of Nystagmus

Spasmus NutansSpasmus Nutans

Page 35: Clinical Correlate: Examination of Nystagmus

Spasmus Nutans:Spasmus Nutans:

Triad of: head turn, head nodding and nystagmus.

Typically develops during the first year of life.

Resolves by age 10.Horizontal or vertical pendular

nystagmus with low amplitude and high frequency.

Page 36: Clinical Correlate: Examination of Nystagmus

Spasmus Nutans:Spasmus Nutans:

May be monocular or of different amplitude and/or phase in each eye.

Optic pathway glioma can cause acquired monocular nystagmus and should be ruled out by MRI.

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Convergence-retraction Convergence-retraction nystagmusnystagmus

Page 38: Clinical Correlate: Examination of Nystagmus

Convergence-retraction Convergence-retraction nystagmus:nystagmus:

Convergence and/or retraction of the eyes elicited by attempted upward saccades or quick phases.

Best seen during stimulation with a downward-moving OKN stimulus.

Page 39: Clinical Correlate: Examination of Nystagmus

Convergence-retraction Convergence-retraction nystagmus:nystagmus:Part of the dorsal midbrain

syndrome:1.Impaired vertical gaze (particularly

upwoard).2.Light-near dissociation of pupillary

responses.3.Lid retraction (Collier’s sign).4.Convergence-retraction nystagmus.5.Spasm or paresis of convergence,

accommodation.6.Skew deviation.

Page 40: Clinical Correlate: Examination of Nystagmus

Convergence-retraction Convergence-retraction nystagmus:nystagmus:Due to lesion affecting the area

of the posterior commissure:

a)Tumors (pineal).b)Hydrocephalus (e.g aqueductal

stenosis).c)Hemorrhage or infarction

(midbrain, thalamus).d)Multiple sclerosis or

inflammatory lesions.

Page 41: Clinical Correlate: Examination of Nystagmus

Upbeat Upbeat NystagmusNystagmus

Page 42: Clinical Correlate: Examination of Nystagmus

Upbeat Nystagmus:Upbeat Nystagmus:Spontaneous nystagmus with

downward slow phases in primary position.

Etiologies:a)Focal lesions: (infarction, tumor,

demyelinating) of the medulla or cerebellum.

b)Cerebellar degeneration.c)Wenicke’s encephalopathy.

Page 43: Clinical Correlate: Examination of Nystagmus

Downbeat Nystagmus:Downbeat Nystagmus:

Page 44: Clinical Correlate: Examination of Nystagmus

Downbeat Nystagmus:Downbeat Nystagmus:Spontaneous upward drift of the eyes.

Characteristic sign of a lesion of the vestibulocerebellum or its pathway or its pathway in the brainstem (cerebellar degeneration, MS, stroke).

Other causes: drug toxicity ‘Li, AED’, Wernicke’s encephalopathy.

Page 45: Clinical Correlate: Examination of Nystagmus

Downbeat Nystagmus:Downbeat Nystagmus:Often occurs in the context of a more

general cerebellar syndrome but may present in isolation & be progressive.

Slow phase waveform may have constant, decreasing, or increasing velocity.

Commonly enhanced by down and lateral gaze.

Page 46: Clinical Correlate: Examination of Nystagmus

Gaze-Evoked NystagmusGaze-Evoked Nystagmus

Page 47: Clinical Correlate: Examination of Nystagmus

Gaze-Evoked Nystagmus:Gaze-Evoked Nystagmus:

Loss of eccentric gaze holding, eyes tend to drift back to the center of the orbit.

Weak neural intergrator does not produce suffeciently strong tonic innervation to hold the eyes against elastic forces.

Page 48: Clinical Correlate: Examination of Nystagmus

Gaze-Evoked Nystagmus:Gaze-Evoked Nystagmus:

Direction of nystagmus depends on gaze direction.

Typically horizontal.

May also include upbeat nystagmus with upgaze.

With sustained gaze >> nystagmus will often diminish.

Page 49: Clinical Correlate: Examination of Nystagmus

Gaze-Evoked Nystagmus:Gaze-Evoked Nystagmus:

Upon return to center position, there may be a brief oppositely directed nystagmus (rebound nystagmus).

Gaze-evoked & downbeat nystagmus often occur together in patients with cerebellar degeneration.

Page 50: Clinical Correlate: Examination of Nystagmus

Gaze-Evoked Nystagmus:Gaze-Evoked Nystagmus:

Etiologies:

Vestibulocerebellar lesions >> cerebellar degeneration.

Functional neural integrator impairment due to drugs (sedatives, AED), metabolic derangements.

Page 51: Clinical Correlate: Examination of Nystagmus

Pendular NystagmusPendular Nystagmus

Page 52: Clinical Correlate: Examination of Nystagmus

Pendular Nystagmus:Pendular Nystagmus:

Sinusoidal oscillation (no quick phase).

May have complex waveform that include horizontal, vertical, and torsional components.

Elliptical nystagmus: horizontal & vertical components out of phase.

Congenital or acquired.

Page 53: Clinical Correlate: Examination of Nystagmus

Pendular Nystagmus:Pendular Nystagmus:

Etiologies:

1.MS.2.Oculopalatal tremor syndrome.3.Whipple’s disease.4.Toulene toxicity.5.Severe visual loss.6.Pelizaeus-Merzbcher disease.

Page 54: Clinical Correlate: Examination of Nystagmus

Seesaw NystagmusSeesaw Nystagmus

Page 55: Clinical Correlate: Examination of Nystagmus

Seesaw Nystagmus:Seesaw Nystagmus:

The interstitial nucleus of Cajal (INC), adjacent to the medial longitudinal fasciculus in the midbrain tegmentum, has been frequently implicated in the pathogenesis of SSN.

Page 56: Clinical Correlate: Examination of Nystagmus

Seesaw Nystagmus:Seesaw Nystagmus:Disconjugate vertical-torsional

nystagmus.

Torsional component has the same direction in both eyes, vertical movement is in opposite direction.

During each cycle, one eye moves upward and intorts and the other eye moves downward and extorts.

Page 57: Clinical Correlate: Examination of Nystagmus

Seesaw Nystagmus:Seesaw Nystagmus:May be pendular (seesaw) or jerk

(hemi-seesaw).Associated with:1.Midbrain stroke.2.Medial medullary stroke.3.MS.4.Chiari Malformation.5.Visual loss6.Parasellar masses.7.Congenital.

Page 58: Clinical Correlate: Examination of Nystagmus

Periodic Alternating Periodic Alternating Nystagmus (PAN):Nystagmus (PAN):

Horizontal jerk nystagmus that changes direction every 2 minute.

Present in the primary position, unlike gaze-evoked nystagmus.

May be accompanied by periodic head deviations that reduce the nystagmus by moving the eyes into relative null position.

Page 59: Clinical Correlate: Examination of Nystagmus

Periodic Alternating Periodic Alternating Nystagmus (PAN):Nystagmus (PAN):

Results from lesions to the vestibulocerebellum (nodulus/uvula) combined with either flocculus/paraflocculus lesions or visual loss.

Baclofen abolishes nystagmus.

Page 60: Clinical Correlate: Examination of Nystagmus

Periodic Alternating Periodic Alternating Nystagmus (PAN):Nystagmus (PAN):

In cases of visual loss >> improvement of vision (viterectomy, cataract extraction) may eliminate nystagmus.

Congenital PAN is less regularly periodic than acquired, does not respond well to baclofen.

In comatose patient with no quick phase, PAN may be seen as periodic alternating gaze deviation.

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Latent NystagmusLatent Nystagmus

Page 62: Clinical Correlate: Examination of Nystagmus

INOINO

Page 63: Clinical Correlate: Examination of Nystagmus

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