News Release

Abnormal involuntary eye movements in amblyopia linked to changes in subcortical regions of brain

Findings rublished in Restorative Neurology and Neuroscience

Peer-Reviewed Publication

IOS Press

Changes in Activities of SC Result in Altered Spatial Distribution of FS Occurrence

image: a-d: Model analysis of FS generation determined by SC activities under normal versus amblyopic viewing conditions. e-f: FS endpoint scatter plot of normal eye (a) and amblyopic eye (c) as measured in subjects. a-b: The activity strength distribution along with eccentricity under normal viewing condition (a) and amblyopic viewing condition (b). The size of the simulated SC activity map is up to 12-degree eccentricity, but only the eccentricity range within 3-degrees is shown here. The dot, dash dot and solid lines describe the excitatory activity level, the inhibitory activity level and the difference of both, respectively. The dashed lines represent the threshold for eliciting FSs. c-d: Simulated spatial distributions of the probability of FS occurrence as a function of endpoint eccentricity. Given that the occurrence rate is positively and linearly correlated with suprathreshold SC activity, the spatial distributions of FS occurrence probability in normal condition (c) and amblyopic condition (d) are shown here. Bin size = 0.15º. e-f: Each dot represents the endpoint spatial locus of a FS event in real subjects. The scatter points spreads more widely in panel (f) than those in panel(e). This indicates that the amblyopic eye has less focused fixational eye movements, reflecting less fixational saccadic control. view more 

Credit: Xue-feng F. Shi

Amsterdam, NL, October 16, 2012 – Little is known about oculomotor function in amblyopia, or "lazy eye," despite the special role of eye movements in vision. A group of scientists has discovered that abnormal visual processing and circuitry in the brain have an impact on fixational saccades (FSs), involuntary eye movements that occur during fixation and are important for the maintenance of vision. The results, which raise the question of whether the alterations in FS are the cause or the effect of amblyopia and have implications for amblyopia treatment, are available online in advance of publication in the November issue of Restorative Neurology and Neuroscience.

"Although FSs are of great functional significance in neural coding, visual perception, and visual task execution, their behavioral characteristics in visual and neurological disease have been rarely studied," says lead investigator Xue-Feng F. Shi, MD, PhD, of the Tianjin Key Laboratory of Ophthalmology and Visual Science, Tianjin Eye Institute, College of Clinical Ophthalmology, Tianjin Medical University, and the Department of Pediatric Ophthalmology and Strabismus, Tianjin Eye Hospital, Tianjin, China. "We carried out quantitative and detailed analysis of fixational saccades in amblyopia for the first time."

Investigators examined 28 patients with amblyopia and 28 age-matched control subjects. Using a high-speed eye-tracker, fixational eye movements of both eyes were recorded. A computerized analysis of eye-movement waveforms was developed to quantify the parameters of FSs, and a simulation model was used to explore the neural mechanism of changes in fixational saccadic performance of amblyopic eyes.

Amblyopic eyes showed fewer FSs than control eyes, but they had increased amplitudes and speed. Periods between movements were significantly longer in amblyopic eyes. FS was suppressed mainly for those with amplitudes smaller than 0.6 degrees, but was increased for those greater than 0.6 degrees. "We conclude that the change of amplitude distribution is a dominant alteration of FSs in amblyopia, while the change of other parameters is secondary. These findings should provide the necessary baseline information for future studies and should advance our understanding of the correlation between visual system impairment and eye-movement behavior," notes Dr. Shi. The simulation model suggests that an excitatory-inhibitory activity imbalance in the superior colliculus (SC) of the brain, an area involved with vision and eye movement, may explain these changes.

Dr. Shi explains that there are two possible interpretations of the study. "Altered FSs may be an effect of amblyopia, an attempt of the visual system to try to capture more information from a broader spatial domain to enhance contrast sensitivity, which is reduced in lazy eye. Or it may be the cause or a contributing factor to the original deficit, which may open up a new avenue for the research of the neural mechanisms of amblyopia that will be as different from the traditional research route as the pioneering work in visual cortex by Hubel and Wiesel (Nobel Laureates). Another issue of particular interest is whether amblyopia treatment and visual training can positively influence FS," he says. "To solve these questions will be a major step forward in our understanding of visual system and eye movement impairments which then provides a new starting point for innovative therapeutic approaches."

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