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Other Titles
 Optokinetic response in the cerebral lesions 
Authors
 최중언 
Issue Date
1973
Description
의학과/석사
Abstract
[한글]

OPTOKINETIC RESPONSE IN THE CEREBRAL LESIONS



Joong Uhn Choi

Department of Medical Science The Graduate School Yonsei University

(Directed by professor Hun Jae Lee, M.D.)



Nystagmus is an involuntary, rhythmic, to and fro oscillation of the eyes. Such

ocular movements may be easily elicited in the normal individuals by a series of

moving target before the eyes. This physiologic reflex is known as optokinetic

nystagmus. This phenomenon was first observed by Purkinje in 1825 while watching a

crowed at a cavalry parade in Vienna.

It is generally known that the optokinetic responses are disturbed in parietal

lobe lesions. Also such a lesion manifests a visual field defect.

However authors have found that the prediction of a disturbance in these

responses in some cases of parietal lobe lesion has not always been borne out.

As a control group, one hundred healthy adults were examined and all of them

showed normal symmetric optokinetic responses. In this study, 17 cases of cerebral

paragonimiasis which predilects to localize in the lower part of the posterior

parietal lobe, 28 cases of brain tumor, 11 cases of head injury, 3 cases of A-V

malformation, 1 case of cerebral thrombosis, 3 cases of brain abscess, 1 case of

cysticercosis, and 1 case of abnormal calcification were observed for optokinetic

nystagmes with correlation to the location of lesion and the visual field defect.

It is this author's suggestions that the optokinetic response is most likely to

be disturbed in lesions involving the lower part of the posterior parietal or

paritoccipital lobe where the optic radiation and efferent optomotor pathway is

also easily damaged. Abnormalities in the optokinetic response are not dependent on

involvement of the visual pathway and also the response does not necessarily depend

on the continuity of the association pathways between the occipital and frontal

cortices. it seems that unless a cortical lesion involving the optomotor area is

large enough in size, the optokinetic response can not be disturbed.

[영문]

Nystagmus is an involuntary, rhythmic, to and fro oscillation of the eyes. Such ocular movements may be easily elicited in the normal individuals by a series of moving target before the eyes. This physiologic reflex is known as optokinetic nystagmus. This phenomenon was first observed by Purkinje in 1825 while watching a crowed at a cavalry parade in Vienna.

It is generally known that the optokinetic responses are disturbed in parietal lobe lesions. Also such a lesion manifests a visual field defect.

However authors have found that the prediction of a disturbance in these responses in some cases of parietal lobe lesion has not always been borne out.

As a control group, one hundred healthy adults were examined and all of them showed normal symmetric optokinetic responses. In this study, 17 cases of cerebral paragonimiasis which predilects to localize in the lower part of the posterior parietal lobe, 28 cases of brain tumor, 11 cases of head injury, 3 cases of A-V

malformation, 1 case of cerebral thrombosis, 3 cases of brain abscess, 1 case of cysticercosis, and 1 case of abnormal calcification were observed for optokinetic nystagmes with correlation to the location of lesion and the visual field defect.

It is this author's suggestions that the optokinetic response is most likely to be disturbed in lesions involving the lower part of the posterior parietal or paritoccipital lobe where the optic radiation and efferent optomotor pathway is also easily damaged. Abnormalities in the optokinetic response are not dependent on involvement of the visual pathway and also the response does not necessarily depend on the continuity of the association pathways between the occipital and frontal cortices. it seems that unless a cortical lesion involving the optomotor area is large enough in size, the optokinetic response can not be disturbed.
Full Text
https://ymlib.yonsei.ac.kr/catalog/search/book-detail/?cid=CAT000000004860
Files in This Item:
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Appears in Collections:
1. College of Medicine (의과대학) > Dept. of Neurosurgery (신경외과학교실) > 2. Thesis
Yonsei Authors
Choi, Joong Uhn(최중언)
URI
https://ir.ymlib.yonsei.ac.kr/handle/22282913/117252
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