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A simple saccadic reading test to assess ocular motor function in cerebellar ataxia

Cerebellar ataxia is a neurological disorder due to dysfunction of the cerebellum that affects coordination of fine movement, gait, and balance. Although ataxic patients commonly exhibit abnormal eye movement and have difficulties with saccadic reading, quantification of ocular motor abilities durin...

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Autores principales: Oh, Angela Jinsook, Chen, Tiffany, Shariati, Mohammad Ali, Jehangir, Naz, Hwang, Thomas N., Liao, Yaping Joyce
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6221255/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30403759
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0203924
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author Oh, Angela Jinsook
Chen, Tiffany
Shariati, Mohammad Ali
Jehangir, Naz
Hwang, Thomas N.
Liao, Yaping Joyce
author_facet Oh, Angela Jinsook
Chen, Tiffany
Shariati, Mohammad Ali
Jehangir, Naz
Hwang, Thomas N.
Liao, Yaping Joyce
author_sort Oh, Angela Jinsook
collection PubMed
description Cerebellar ataxia is a neurological disorder due to dysfunction of the cerebellum that affects coordination of fine movement, gait, and balance. Although ataxic patients commonly exhibit abnormal eye movement and have difficulties with saccadic reading, quantification of ocular motor abilities during reading in the clinical setting is rarely done. In this study, we assess visual performance with simple reading tests that can be used in the clinical setting and performed video infrared oculography in 11 patients with hereditary or acquired cerebellar ataxia and 11 age-matched controls. We found that compared with controls, ataxic patients read significantly slower on regularly and irregularly spaced 120 single-digit number reading tasks (read aloud) (p = 0.02 for both) but not on a word reading task (read silently), although there was large variability on the word reading task. Among the 3 reading tasks, the regularly spaced number reading task had the greatest difference (44%) between ataxic patients and controls. Analysis of oculography revealed that ataxic patients had slower reading speeds on the regularly spaced number reading task because of significantly higher saccade and fixation counts, impairment of small amplitude progressive saccades as well as large amplitude, line-changing saccades, greater fixation dispersion, and irregularity of scan paths and staircase gaze patterns. Our findings show that infrared oculography remains the gold standard in assessment of ocular motor difficulties during reading in ataxic patients. In the absence of this capability in the clinical setting, a simple 120 regularly spaced single-digit saccadic number reading test, which most patients can perform in less than 2 minutes, can be a possible biomarker for ocular motor abilities necessary for reading.
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spelling pubmed-62212552018-11-19 A simple saccadic reading test to assess ocular motor function in cerebellar ataxia Oh, Angela Jinsook Chen, Tiffany Shariati, Mohammad Ali Jehangir, Naz Hwang, Thomas N. Liao, Yaping Joyce PLoS One Research Article Cerebellar ataxia is a neurological disorder due to dysfunction of the cerebellum that affects coordination of fine movement, gait, and balance. Although ataxic patients commonly exhibit abnormal eye movement and have difficulties with saccadic reading, quantification of ocular motor abilities during reading in the clinical setting is rarely done. In this study, we assess visual performance with simple reading tests that can be used in the clinical setting and performed video infrared oculography in 11 patients with hereditary or acquired cerebellar ataxia and 11 age-matched controls. We found that compared with controls, ataxic patients read significantly slower on regularly and irregularly spaced 120 single-digit number reading tasks (read aloud) (p = 0.02 for both) but not on a word reading task (read silently), although there was large variability on the word reading task. Among the 3 reading tasks, the regularly spaced number reading task had the greatest difference (44%) between ataxic patients and controls. Analysis of oculography revealed that ataxic patients had slower reading speeds on the regularly spaced number reading task because of significantly higher saccade and fixation counts, impairment of small amplitude progressive saccades as well as large amplitude, line-changing saccades, greater fixation dispersion, and irregularity of scan paths and staircase gaze patterns. Our findings show that infrared oculography remains the gold standard in assessment of ocular motor difficulties during reading in ataxic patients. In the absence of this capability in the clinical setting, a simple 120 regularly spaced single-digit saccadic number reading test, which most patients can perform in less than 2 minutes, can be a possible biomarker for ocular motor abilities necessary for reading. Public Library of Science 2018-11-07 /pmc/articles/PMC6221255/ /pubmed/30403759 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0203924 Text en © 2018 Oh et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Oh, Angela Jinsook
Chen, Tiffany
Shariati, Mohammad Ali
Jehangir, Naz
Hwang, Thomas N.
Liao, Yaping Joyce
A simple saccadic reading test to assess ocular motor function in cerebellar ataxia
title A simple saccadic reading test to assess ocular motor function in cerebellar ataxia
title_full A simple saccadic reading test to assess ocular motor function in cerebellar ataxia
title_fullStr A simple saccadic reading test to assess ocular motor function in cerebellar ataxia
title_full_unstemmed A simple saccadic reading test to assess ocular motor function in cerebellar ataxia
title_short A simple saccadic reading test to assess ocular motor function in cerebellar ataxia
title_sort simple saccadic reading test to assess ocular motor function in cerebellar ataxia
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6221255/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30403759
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0203924
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