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  Vol. 123 No. 6, June 2005 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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Visuo-Vestibular Eye Movements

Infantile Strabismus in 3 Dimensions

Michael C. Brodsky, MD

Arch Ophthalmol. 2005;123:837-842.

Infantile strabismus is accompanied by latent nystagmus, primary inferior oblique muscle overaction, and dissociated vertical divergence. If we examine the evolutionary underpinnings of these ocular rotations, we can construct a unifying mechanism for the sensorimotor abnormalities that arise in humans with infantile strabismus. Latent nystagmus, primary inferior oblique muscle overaction, and dissociated vertical divergence correspond to visual balancing reflexes that are operative in lateral-eyed animals in yaw, pitch, and roll, respectively. In humans with infantile strabismus, these subcortical visual reflexes are reactivated by a physiologic imbalance in binocular visual input, which resets central vestibular tone in 3-dimensional space. These visual reflexes reveal the evolutionary role of the eyes as sensory balance organs that can directly modulate central vestibular tone. Latent nystagmus, primary oblique muscle overaction, and dissociated vertical divergence should be reclassified as visuo-vestibular eye movements.


Author Affiliations: Departments of Ophthalmology and Pediatrics, University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, Little Rock.



THIS ARTICLE HAS BEEN CITED BY OTHER ARTICLES

Dissociated Horizontal Deviation After Surgery for Infantile Esotropia: Clinical Characteristics and Proposed Pathophysiologic Mechanisms
Brodsky and Fray
Arch Ophthalmol 2007;125:1683-1692.
ABSTRACT | FULL TEXT  

Does Infantile Esotropia Arise From a Dissociated Deviation?
Brodsky and Fray
Arch Ophthalmol 2007;125:1703-1706.
ABSTRACT | FULL TEXT  





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