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Gaze Holding in Cerebellar Patients

University of Zurich (UZH) logo

University of Zurich (UZH)

Status

Completed

Conditions

Rebound in Humans
Gaze Holding in Humans

Treatments

Other: visual stimulus to follow

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT02185313
gaze_holding_cerebellar_zurich

Details and patient eligibility

About

The long-term goal of this research is to advance the investigators knowledge of how the cerebellum a) controls gaze holding and compensates for impaired gaze stability and b) modulates vestibular information that is forward-ed from the labyrinth and brought to perception. While gaze holding is stable also at large angles of gaze eccentricity in healthy human subjects, patients with chronic (degenerative) cerebellar disorders are inable to stabilize gaze in eccentric positions, resulting in eye drift towards primary (straight-ahead) position and com-pensatory gaze-evoked nystagmus. When returning to primary position, a compensatory nystagmus into the opposite direction (called rebound nystagmus) can be observed in these patients. Unlike patients with de-generative cerebellar disorders, patients suffering from ischemic of hemorrhagic stroke within the cerebellum present with acute deficits of gaze holding and verticality perception.

While a linear relationship between the amount of eye velocity drift and eccentricity of eye position has been proposed in healthy human subjects, others suggested non-linear behaviour. The strategy of this research is to characterize gaze holding and verticality perception in healthy human subjects and patients with either acute (ischemic or hemorrhagic) or chronic degenerative cerebellar disorders and to relate eye movement findings with structural imaging of the cerebellum. The investigators will therefore analyze key cerebellar structures with regards to loss of volume and relate these imaging findings with the participants' ability to hold gaze and es-timate direction of vertical. The investigators hypothesize that besides the flocculus other vestibulo-cerebellar structures are involved in gaze holding and verticality perception in humans.

Enrollment

22 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 85 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  1. ages 18-85
  2. informed consent
  3. for group 1: acute (i.e. symptom onset <14 days ago) cerebellar ischemia or hemorrhage as confirmed by clinical examination and brain imaging (CT or MRI)
  4. for group 2: chronic cerebellar degeneration as confirmed by clinical examination (presence of downbeat-nystagmus and / or gaze-evoked nystagmus and / or ataxia of gait and stance) in the absence of focal lesions (as previous cerebellar stroke, mass lesion or inflammation) on clinical routine cerebellar imaging
  5. absence of exclusion criteria

Exclusion criteria

  1. has MRI contraindications such as pacemaker, implanted pumps, shrapnel, etc. (full MRI screening form will be filled out).
  2. disturbed consciousness
  3. other neurological or systemic disorder which can cause dementia or cognitive dysfunction
  4. Pregnancy or possible pregnancy if not ruled out by a negative pregnancy test.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Basic Science

Allocation

N/A

Interventional model

Single Group Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

22 participants in 1 patient group

gaze holding
Experimental group
Treatment:
Other: visual stimulus to follow

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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