The key to the diagnosis of ocular motor disorders is a systematic clinical examination of the different types of eye movements, including eye position, spontaneous nystagmus, range of eye movements, smooth pursuit, saccades, gaze-holding function, vergence, optokinetic nystagmus, as well as testing of the function of the vestibulo-ocular reflex (VOR) and visual fixation suppression of the VOR. This is like a window which allows you to look into the brain stem and cerebellum even if imaging is normal. Relevant anatomical structures are the midbrain, pons, medulla, cerebellum and rarely the cortex. There is a simple clinical rule: vertical and torsional eye movements are generated in the midbrain, horizontal eye movements in the pons. For ex...
Many structures within the medulla are important in the control of eye movements: the vestibular nuc...
Multiple sclerosis (MS) is a demyelinating disease of the central nervous system leading to disabili...
Several structures, located at different levels in the Central Nervous System (CNS), collaborate to ...
The key to the diagnosis of ocular motor disorders is a systematic clinical examination of the diffe...
Nystagmus is defined as rhythmic, most often involuntary eye movements. It normally consists of a sl...
The brainstem contains numerous structures including afferent and efferent fibers that are involved ...
Here we present a bedside approach to patients with vestibular and cerebellar disease emphasizing cl...
The hallmark of a supranuclear eye movement disorder is functional impairment of one or several type...
(1) Saccadic hypermetria - an overshoot of the visual target (2) Saccadic smooth pursuit - d...
Eye movements provide rich source of information about brain functioning for neurologists and neuros...
The cerebellum plays a central role in the control of every type of eye movements It has both immedi...
Eye movements are a source of valuable information to both clinicians and scientists as abnormalitie...
The cerebellum plays a central role in the control of every type of eye movements It has both immedi...
The ocular motor system consists of several subsystems, including the vestibular ocular nystagmus sa...
The cerebellum plays a central role in the control of every type of eye movements It has both immedi...
Many structures within the medulla are important in the control of eye movements: the vestibular nuc...
Multiple sclerosis (MS) is a demyelinating disease of the central nervous system leading to disabili...
Several structures, located at different levels in the Central Nervous System (CNS), collaborate to ...
The key to the diagnosis of ocular motor disorders is a systematic clinical examination of the diffe...
Nystagmus is defined as rhythmic, most often involuntary eye movements. It normally consists of a sl...
The brainstem contains numerous structures including afferent and efferent fibers that are involved ...
Here we present a bedside approach to patients with vestibular and cerebellar disease emphasizing cl...
The hallmark of a supranuclear eye movement disorder is functional impairment of one or several type...
(1) Saccadic hypermetria - an overshoot of the visual target (2) Saccadic smooth pursuit - d...
Eye movements provide rich source of information about brain functioning for neurologists and neuros...
The cerebellum plays a central role in the control of every type of eye movements It has both immedi...
Eye movements are a source of valuable information to both clinicians and scientists as abnormalitie...
The cerebellum plays a central role in the control of every type of eye movements It has both immedi...
The ocular motor system consists of several subsystems, including the vestibular ocular nystagmus sa...
The cerebellum plays a central role in the control of every type of eye movements It has both immedi...
Many structures within the medulla are important in the control of eye movements: the vestibular nuc...
Multiple sclerosis (MS) is a demyelinating disease of the central nervous system leading to disabili...
Several structures, located at different levels in the Central Nervous System (CNS), collaborate to ...