J R Soc Med 2002;95:235-237
doi:10.1258/jrsm.95.5.235
© 2002 Royal Society of Medicine
Medical treatment of nystagmus and its visual consequences
John S Stahl MD PhD
Gordon T Plant FRCP 1
R John Leigh MD
Department of Neurology, Veterans Affairs Medical Center, and University
Hospitals, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio 44106, USA
1 Department of Neurology, Guy's & St Thomas' Hospitals, London, UK
Correspondence to: R John Leigh MD, Department of Neurology, University
Hospitals, 11100 Euclid Avenue, Cleveland, Ohio 44106-5040, USA E-mail:
rjl4{at}po.cwru.edu
 |
INTRODUCTION
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For us to see clearly the details in our visual world, images
must be held
quite still upon the retina, especially the central
part (the fovea). For
reading, which concerns detection of high
spatial frequencies, image motion
must be less than about 5°
/
second
1. If image
drift substantially exceeds this limit,
visual acuity will decline and we may
experience the illusion
that the world is moving (oscillopsia). In health,
three main
mechanisms hold the line of sight steady so that our view of
the
world is clear and
stable
2. The first
is fixation,
which has two distinct componentsthe visual
system's
ability to detect retinal image drift and programme corrective
eye
movements, and the ability to suppress unwanted eye movements
that would take
the eye away from the target. The second mechanism
is the vestibulo-ocular
reflex, by which the motion detectors
of the inner ear promptly initiate eye
movements to compensate
for head perturbations, such as occur during
locomotion. The
third mechanism is the gaze-holding system, which makes it
possible
to hold the eyes at an eccentric position (e.g. in lateral gaze).
If any of the three mechanisms that normally act to hold gaze steady
malfunctions, the eyes may start to drift away from the object of regard, and
corrective rapid eye movements may be made. Thus, nystagmus may be defined as
repetitive to-and-fro involuntary eye movements that are initiated by slow
drifts of the eye. It is important to realize that some forms of nystagmus are
normal. Thus, nystagmus that occurs during rotation of the body in space acts
to preserve clear vision. In pathological nystagmus, however, drifts
of the eyes away from the target degrade vision. In one form, pendular
nystagmus, the drifts consist of a to-and-fro sinusoidal oscillation.
More commonly, nystagmus consists of alternation of unidirectional drifts away
from the target and corrective fast movements (saccades) which momentarily
bring the visual target back to the fovea; this is jerk
nystagmus.
Nystagmus should be distinguished from inappropriate saccades that disrupt
steady fixation. Saccades produce high-speed movement of images upon the
retinatoo high for clear visionand several physiological
mechanisms exist to prevent perception of the smeared retinal signal due to
the saccade. However, patients in whom inappropriate saccades repeatedly
misdirect the fovea often complain of difficulty with reading.
| Box 1 Medical strategies for treating nystagmus and its visual
consequences
- Methods that place the eye in a position in which nystagmus is
minimized
- Optical and electronic methods for negating the visual consequences of the
nystagmus
- Procedures for weakening the extraocular muscles
- Application of somatosensory or auditory stimuli to suppress nystagmus
- Drugs that suppress some forms of nystagmus.
|
Five main approaches to treating pathological nystagmus and its visual
consequences are summarized in Box 1. For a fuller discussion of the clinical
features, pathogenesis and treatment of nystagmus, the reader is referred to a
recent textbook on eye
movements2.
 |
METHODS THAT PLACE THE EYE IN A POSITION IN WHICH NYSTAGMUS IS
MINIMIZED
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In patients whose nystagmus is suppressed by viewing a near
target,
convergence prisms will often improve vision. This is
especially the case in
some patients with congenital nystagmus,
when the improvement of vision may be
appreciable. An arrangement
that is often effective is 7.00 diopter base-out
prisms with
1.00 diopter spheres added to compensate for induced
accommodation
3.
The
spherical correction is not usually required in presbyopic
individuals. Some
patients with acquired nystagmus also
benefit
4,
and in
patients whose nystagmus is worse during near viewing,
base-in prisms may
help. In patients whose nystagmus is quieter
when the eyes are moved into a
particular position in the orbit
(the null region) prisms only
rarely help, since
most patients use head-turns to bring their eyes to the
quietest
position.
 |
OPTICAL AND ELECTRONIC METHODS FOR NEGATING THE VISUAL CONSEQUENCES
OF THE NYSTAGMUS
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Rushton and Cox described an optical system that stabilizes
images upon the
retina
5. This system
consists of a high-positive-power
spectacle lens worn in combination with a
high-negative-power
contact lens. The system rests on the principle that
stabilization
of images on the retina is achieved if the spectacle lens
focuses
the primary image close to the centre of rotation of the eye.
Such
images, however, are defocused, and a contact lens is required
to extend back
the focus onto the retina. Since the contact
lens moves with the eye, it does
not negate the effect of retinal
image stabilization produced by the spectacle
lens. With such
a system it is possible to achieve up to 90% stabilization of
images
upon the retina. There are several limitations to this
system
6.
The first
is that it disables all eye movements (including the
vestibulo-ocular reflex
and vergence), so that it is only useful
while the patient is stationary and
views monocularly. Another
limitation is that the field of view is limited. A
third is
that patients with ataxia or tremor (such as those with multiple
sclerosis)
have difficulty inserting the contact lens. We have found that,
in
selected patients, a modification of the device, which uses
soft contact
lenses and attempts to provide lower amounts of
retinal image stabilization,
may prove useful for limited periods
of timefor example, if the patient
wishes to watch a
television
programme
6.
A more recent innovation is to use an electronic circuit to distinguish
between the nystagmus oscillations and normal eye
movements7. This
approach is most useful in patients with pendular nystagmus. Eye movements are
measured with an infrared sensor and fed to a phase-locked loop that generates
a signal similar to the nystagmus but is insensitive to other eye movements,
such as saccades. This electronic signal is then used to rotate Risley prisms,
through which the patient views the world. When the Risley prisms rotate in
synchrony with the patient's nystagmus, they nullify the visual effects of the
ocular oscillations. Improvement and miniaturization of a prototype device may
eventually yield spectacles that selectively cancel out the visual effects of
pathological
nystagmus7.
 |
MEDICAL PROCEDURES FOR WEAKENING THE EXTRAOCULAR MUSCLES
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Injection of
botulinum toxin into either the extraocular muscles
or
the retrobulbar space has been reported to reduce nystagmus
and improve
vision in some
patients
8,9,10,11.
Limitations of
this approach are the short period of action (2-3 months),
ptosis,
and diplopia, which may be more annoying to patients than visual
symptoms
due to the nystagmus. In some patients, the nystagmus may become
worse
in the non-injected eye, if the patient prefers to view with
the
injected eye. This is because botulinum toxin weakens all
types of eye
movement, not just the nystagmus. This paresis
of normal movements stimulates
the brain to make adaptive changes
by increasing innervation that may worsen
the nystagmus in the
non-injected eye.
 |
APPLICATION OF SOMATOSENSORY OR AUDITORY STIMULI TO SUPPRESS
NYSTAGMUS
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Various alternative treatments have been suggested for congenital
nystagmus.
Contact lenses can be beneficial, an effect that is not due
to the
mass of the lenses but is probably mediated via trigeminal
afferents
3,12.
Electrical
stimulation or vibration over the forehead or neck may suppress
congenital
nystagmus
13,
again
possibly by an action on the trigeminal system, which
receives extraocular
proprioception. Similarly, acupuncture
administered to the neck muscles may
suppress congenital nystagmus
in some
patients
14.
Biofeedback has also been reported
helpful
15,16.
The
role of any of these treatments outside the laboratory, during
natural
activities, has yet to be demonstrated.
 |
DRUG TREATMENTS FOR NYSTAGMUS
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Several drugs have been reported to suppress various forms of
nystagmus and
improve vision (
Box 2), though
the studies have
mostly been uncontrolled or non-masked. Current concepts of
the
neurobiology of eye movements provide a rationale for three
specific
treatments, each of which has met with some success.
For us to hold the eyes steadily at an eccentric position (e.g. turned into
right gaze), the brain must programme a tonic contraction of the extraocular
muscles, otherwise the orbital tissue will pull back the eyes towards the
centre2. This
gaze-holding mechanism depends mainly on a network of neurons that lie in the
medulla for horizontal
gaze17 and in the
midbrain for vertical
gaze18.
Pharmacological inactivation of the neural network in the medulla causes the
eyes to drift to the centre and cause gaze-evoked nystagmus.
These studies have indicated that two neurotransmitters are important in this
gaze-holding process: gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) and
glutamate19,20.
Theoretical and experimental evidence has suggested that some forms of
nystagmus, such as the pendular nystagmus that occurs in multiple sclerosis,
may arise from an instability in the gaze-holding
mechanism21. The
information served as the impetus for a controlled, double-blind trial of two
agents with GABA effectsgabapentin and
baclofen22. Most
patients with pendular nystagmus benefited from gabapentin and elected to
continue with this drug after the trial was completed. An open trial of a drug
with glutamate effects, memantine, was also reported to offer improvement in
patients with pendular nystagmus due to multiple
sclerosis23.
In two rarer disorders, an understanding of pathogenesis suggested
effective treatments. One is familial episodic vertigo and ataxia type 2 (a
disorder of calcium channels), which responds to acetazolamide and calcium
channel blockers24.
The second is periodic alternating nystagmus, which follows lesions of the
nodulus (vestibular cerebellum) and responds to
baclofen25,26.
With improved knowledge of the pharmacology of the ocular motor system,
further drug treatments are likely. Some agents, such as cannabis and
alcohol27, are not
viable treatments during everyday activities because of their side-effects;
however, they may provide clues leading to new drug strategies. Before any
agent can be regarded as an effective treatment for nystagmus, a controlled
masked trial is
essential28.
 |
Acknowledgments
|
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Dr Stahl is supported in part by NIH grant K08 EY00356. Dr Leigh
is
supported by NIH grant EY06717, the Office of Research and
Development,
Medical Research Service, Department of Veterans
Affairs, and the Evenor
Armington Fund.
 |
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