Oscillatory eye movements resembling pendular nystagmus in normal juvenile macaques

Natsuko Shichinohe, Graham Barnes, Teppei Akao, Sergei Kurkin, Junko Fukushima, Manabu Kase, R. John Leigh, Tim Belton, Kikuro Fukushima

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    Abstract

    Purpose. Juvenile monkeys being trained on smooth-pursuit tasks exhibit ocular oscillations resembling pendular nystagmus. The purpose of this study was to analyze these oscillations, the effects of gabapentin on them, and responses of cerebellar floccular neurons to understand possible neuronal mechanisms. Methods. Four monkeys were trained for horizontal and vertical smooth pursuit; in two, saccades were also tested. Frequency, peak-to-peak eye velocity, and amplitude of the ocular oscillations were measured. In one monkey, the effect of gabapentin on the oscillations was measured, and oscillationrelated neuronal discharge was recorded in the cerebellar floccular region. Results. Ocular oscillations, with features of pendular nystagmus, appeared early during training of both horizontal and vertical pursuit in all four monkeys. Although these oscillations were observed both in the direction of pursuit and orthogonally, the velocity and amplitude of oscillation were larger in the direction of pursuit, implicating pursuit mechanisms in their generation. Corrective saccades were often superimposed on the oscillations during pursuit and fixation. Gabapentin suppressed oscillations in the monkey tested. Recordings in the floccular region revealed a subset of neurons discharged during both the oscillations and corrective saccades. Many of them exhibited burst-tonic discharge during visually guided saccades, similar to discharge of brain stem burst-tonic neurons, suggesting contributions of the neural integrator to the oscillations. Conclusions. The developmentally transient ocular oscillations occurring in monkeys during pursuit training has properties resembling pendular nystagmus. Both smooth pursuit and a neural integrator may contribute to these ocular oscillations. Analysis using an efference-copy pursuit model supports the interpretation herein. © 2011 The Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology, Inc.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)3458-3467
    Number of pages9
    JournalInvestigative Ophthalmology and Visual Science
    Volume52
    Issue number6
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - May 2011

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