4.3 Article

Fixational eye movements following concussion

期刊

JOURNAL OF VISION
卷 21, 期 13, 页码 1-14

出版社

ASSOC RESEARCH VISION OPHTHALMOLOGY INC
DOI: 10.1167/jov.21.13.11

关键词

fixational eye movements; microsaccades; concussion; scanning laser ophthalmoscopy; eye motion measurement

资金

  1. C. Light Technologies, Inc.
  2. University of Pittsburgh
  3. University of Pittsburgh Clinical and Translational Science Institute, through National Institutes of Health [UL1 TR001857, KL2 TR001856, TL1 TR001858]
  4. National Institutes of Health [P30 EY08098]
  5. Research to Prevent Blindness
  6. National Football League through the University of Pittsburgh

向作者/读者索取更多资源

This study evaluated fixational eye movements in adolescents and young adults following concussion using a retinal eye-tracking device. The results showed significantly higher fixational saccade amplitudes in recent concussion patients compared to controls, while no group differences were observed for drift metrics. Task optimization may improve differentiation, and further research on FEMs in concussion recovery is warranted.
The purpose of this study was to evaluate fixational eye movements (FEMs) with high spatial and temporal resolution following concussion, where oculomotor symptoms and impairments are common. Concussion diagnosis was determined using current consensus guidelines. A retinal eye-tracking device, the tracking scanning laser ophthalmoscope (TSLO), was used to measure FEMs in adolescents and young adults following a concussion and in an unaffected control population. FEMs were quantified in two fixational paradigms: (1) when fixating on the center, or (2) when fixating on the corner of the TSLO imaging raster. Fixational saccade amplitude in recent concussion patients (<= 21 days) was significantly greater, on average, in the concussion group (mean = 1.03 degrees; SD = 0.36 degrees) compared with the controls (mean = 0.82 degrees; SD = 0.31 degrees), when fixating on the center of the imaging raster (t = 2.87, df = 82, p = 0.005). These fixational saccades followed the main sequence and therefore also had greater peak velocity (t = 2.86, df = 82, p = 0.006) and peak acceleration (t = 2.80, df = 82, p = 0.006). These metrics significantly differentiated concussed from controls (AUC = 0.67-0.68, minimum p = 0.005). No group differences were seen for the drift metrics in either task or for any of the FEMs metrics in the corner-of-raster fixation task. Fixational saccade amplitudes were significantly different in the concussion group, but only when fixating on the center of the raster. This task specificity suggests that task optimization may improve differentiation and warrants further study. FEMs measured in the acute-to-subacute period of concussion recovery may provide a quick (<3 minutes), objective, sensitive, and accurate ocular dysfunction assessment. Future work should assess the impact of age, mechanism of injury, and post-concussion recovery on FEM alterations following concussion.

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