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How to test ocular movements in PSP Jan Kassubek Universitätsklinik für Neurologie, Ulm

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Page 1: How to test ocular movements in PSP · How to test ocular movements in PSP ... •markedly diminished blink rate •eye‐opening and eye‐closing apraxia •`lazy lid phenomenon`

How to test ocular movements in PSP

Jan Kassubek

Universitätsklinik für Neurologie, Ulm

Page 2: How to test ocular movements in PSP · How to test ocular movements in PSP ... •markedly diminished blink rate •eye‐opening and eye‐closing apraxia •`lazy lid phenomenon`
Page 3: How to test ocular movements in PSP · How to test ocular movements in PSP ... •markedly diminished blink rate •eye‐opening and eye‐closing apraxia •`lazy lid phenomenon`

• initially slowing of vertical saccades• slowing of downward saccades is considered the hallmark of PSP 

and is included in the diagnostic criteria• PSP patients’ eyes might tonically drift in response to the visual cue 

in the direction of the slow phase of the nystagmus (loss of reflexive saccades)

• advanced disease: possibly complete ophthalmoplegia• markedly hypometric vertical and horizontal saccades • smooth pursuit at least moderately impaired• prominent fixation instability with small‐amplitude horizontal 

square wave jerks • markedly diminished blink rate• eye‐opening and eye‐closing apraxia• `lazy lid phenomenon` (S. Lorenzl)

Bedside Screening: PSP

Anderson & McAskill, Nat Rev Neurol 2013

Page 4: How to test ocular movements in PSP · How to test ocular movements in PSP ... •markedly diminished blink rate •eye‐opening and eye‐closing apraxia •`lazy lid phenomenon`
Page 5: How to test ocular movements in PSP · How to test ocular movements in PSP ... •markedly diminished blink rate •eye‐opening and eye‐closing apraxia •`lazy lid phenomenon`

non‐invasive: Video‐OculographyEyeLink® I EyeSeeCam®

Oculomotor Lab in Ulm

stimulus presentation

Page 6: How to test ocular movements in PSP · How to test ocular movements in PSP ... •markedly diminished blink rate •eye‐opening and eye‐closing apraxia •`lazy lid phenomenon`

Reactive (vertical) saccades

healthy control

PSP patient

time / s0 0.5 1.0 1.5 2.0 2.5 3.0

stimulus

0

15

Eye Po

sition / °

‐15

0

15

Eye Po

sition/ °

‐15

400

100

400

100

peak eye velocity (>400°/s)

Eye

Velocity 

°/s 

pathologically reduced peak eye velocity (<200°/s)Eye

Velocity 

°/s 

Gorges et al., J Ophthalmol 2014

Page 7: How to test ocular movements in PSP · How to test ocular movements in PSP ... •markedly diminished blink rate •eye‐opening and eye‐closing apraxia •`lazy lid phenomenon`

PSP: subtypes RS und PSP-P

Williams et al., Brain 2005

Page 8: How to test ocular movements in PSP · How to test ocular movements in PSP ... •markedly diminished blink rate •eye‐opening and eye‐closing apraxia •`lazy lid phenomenon`

Functional networks: saccades selection of saccadesbased on Hikosaka & Wurtz 1983

frontal cortexparietal cortex

basalganglia

Colliculussuperior

brainstem

ocular muscles

tonicinhibition

plan

ned

unpl

anne

d

phasic

Saccadic Eye Movements

Page 9: How to test ocular movements in PSP · How to test ocular movements in PSP ... •markedly diminished blink rate •eye‐opening and eye‐closing apraxia •`lazy lid phenomenon`

Pathophysiology of vertical gaze palsy in PSP

lesions of burst neurons in riMLF(rostral interstitial nucleus of themedial longitudinal fascicle) forvertical saccades

-> decreased firing rate

-> decreased saccade velocity.

PSPNOR

Page 10: How to test ocular movements in PSP · How to test ocular movements in PSP ... •markedly diminished blink rate •eye‐opening and eye‐closing apraxia •`lazy lid phenomenon`

VOG: velocities of reactive saccades in PSP

PD and controls did not differ

PSP-P and RS significantly slower than PD and controls

PSP-P and RS with no significant differences

individual level: in 10 out of 12 RS and 4 out of 5 PSP-P patients peak velocity below 5%-Percentile of the controls

horizontal

-600

-400

-200

0

200

400

600

-40 -20 0 20 40

amplitude

velo

city

PSP-PRSCNTIPD vertical

-600

-400

-200

0

200

400

600

-40 -20 0 20 40

amplitude

velo

city

PSP-PRSCNTIPD

Pinkhardt et al., J Neurol (2008)

Page 11: How to test ocular movements in PSP · How to test ocular movements in PSP ... •markedly diminished blink rate •eye‐opening and eye‐closing apraxia •`lazy lid phenomenon`

PSP-RS

-500

-400

-300

-200

-100

0

100

200

300

400

500

-30 -20 -10 0 10 20 30

Amplitude [°]

vert

ikal

e M

axim

alge

schw

indi

gkei

t [°/s

]

1

10

13

16

17

18

24

26

31

121.1

121.2

124

CTL

PSP-P

-500

-400

-300

-200

-100

0

100

200

300

400

500

-30 -20 -10 0 10 20 30

Amplitude [°]ve

rtik

ale

Max

imal

gesc

hwin

digk

eit [

°/s]

4.1

4.2

4.3

11.1

25.1

25.2

125.1

131.1

CTL

CTL CTL

Individual variability of SNGP in PSP

Page 12: How to test ocular movements in PSP · How to test ocular movements in PSP ... •markedly diminished blink rate •eye‐opening and eye‐closing apraxia •`lazy lid phenomenon`

NB:

Slow verticalsaccades not in allPSP patients

Page 13: How to test ocular movements in PSP · How to test ocular movements in PSP ... •markedly diminished blink rate •eye‐opening and eye‐closing apraxia •`lazy lid phenomenon`

erroneous response

0

20

Eye Po

sition / °

‐20

time / s‐0.02 0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1.0

anti‐saccade

0

20

Eye Po

sition / °

‐20

Executive control: anti‐saccade

stimulus

Page 14: How to test ocular movements in PSP · How to test ocular movements in PSP ... •markedly diminished blink rate •eye‐opening and eye‐closing apraxia •`lazy lid phenomenon`

VOG helps to differentiate PD and PSP-P already in early stagesand clinically similar presentation (saccade velocity).

Williams et al. described SNGP in PSP-P (if any) to occur late in the disease course – based upon clinical examination.

PSP-P and RS could not be differentiated by VOG in thisretrospective study.

VOG: PSP-P vs. RS

Page 15: How to test ocular movements in PSP · How to test ocular movements in PSP ... •markedly diminished blink rate •eye‐opening and eye‐closing apraxia •`lazy lid phenomenon`

SPEM

Saccades

„cerebellar“

MSA

SPEM

Saccades

„cerebellar“

MSA

GP PSP

Apraxia CBS

PD

Literature

In `atypical` Parkinsonism, oculomotor pathologyoccurs with large overlap.

PD patients also showpathological pursuit and pathological reactivesaccades.

Oculomotor functions in Parkinsonian syndromes

Page 16: How to test ocular movements in PSP · How to test ocular movements in PSP ... •markedly diminished blink rate •eye‐opening and eye‐closing apraxia •`lazy lid phenomenon`

VOG: SPEM in MSA

MSA vs. PD vs. CTLSPEM horizontal: significantdifference between MSA, PD and CTL[0.375 Hz > 0.125 Hz]

MSA-C vs. MSA-PNo significant difference forGain and Phase angle between MSA-C and MSA-P(49% of MSA with OPCD andSND (Ozawa et al., Brain 2004)

Page 17: How to test ocular movements in PSP · How to test ocular movements in PSP ... •markedly diminished blink rate •eye‐opening and eye‐closing apraxia •`lazy lid phenomenon`

Parkinsonism and oculomotor deficits: differential diagnostics

Pinkhardt & Kassubek, Parkinsonism Rel Disord (2011)

Page 18: How to test ocular movements in PSP · How to test ocular movements in PSP ... •markedly diminished blink rate •eye‐opening and eye‐closing apraxia •`lazy lid phenomenon`

Utility of eye movement recordings in PSP

Anderson & McAskill, Nat Rev Neurol (2013)

Page 19: How to test ocular movements in PSP · How to test ocular movements in PSP ... •markedly diminished blink rate •eye‐opening and eye‐closing apraxia •`lazy lid phenomenon`

Conclusion I: Present knowledge

• With respect to the subdivision of the clinical PSP syndrome to RS and PSP-P, a clinically assessable vertical gaze palsy is not described as a leading symptom in early PSP-P.

By hands of VOG, nearly similar oculomotor deficits have been shown in both RS and PSP-P with a prominent decreased saccadic velocity (vertical > horizontal), decreased gain of saccades, and smooth pursuit eye movements even in the early course of the disease when motor symptoms of PSP-P are very similar to PD.

VOG is useful in clinical diagnostics, also with respect to otherentities, although overlapping findings exist.

Anderson & McAskill, Nat Rev Neurol (2013)

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Conclusion II: Present knowledge deficits

• Prospective longitudinal data in early stages of PSP-P and RS arelacking and should be acquired in order to assess the biomarkerpotential of oculomotor alterations in PSP and other Parkinsoniansyndromes.

correlation to other technical parameters (e.g. MRI)

• For that purpose, more experience in multi-center data acquisitionand postprocessing needs to be gained

first studies exist (AL-108 PSP Study, Allon Therapeutics)

Knake et al., MovDisord (2010)

Prof. H.-J- Huppertz,Zürich

Whitwell et al., Parkinsonism Rel Disord (2011)

ABV DTI ifc MRI