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Abnormalities of fixation, saccade and pursuit in posterior cortical atrophy

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Title: Abnormalities of fixation, saccade and pursuit in posterior cortical atrophy
Authors: Shakespeare, TJ
Kaski, D
Yong, KXX
Paterson, RW
Slattery, CF
Ryan, NS
Schott, JM
Crutch, SJ
Item Type: Journal Article
Abstract: The clinico-neuroradiological syndrome posterior cortical atrophy is the cardinal ‘visual dementia’ and most common atypical Alzheimer’s disease phenotype, offering insights into mechanisms underlying clinical heterogeneity, pathological propagation and basic visual phenomena (e.g. visual crowding). Given the extensive attention paid to patients’ (higher order) perceptual function, it is surprising that there have been no systematic analyses of basic oculomotor function in this population. Here 20 patients with posterior cortical atrophy, 17 patients with typical Alzheimer’s disease and 22 healthy controls completed tests of fixation, saccade (including fixation/target gap and overlap conditions) and smooth pursuit eye movements using an infrared pupil-tracking system. Participants underwent detailed neuropsychological and neurological examinations, with a proportion also undertaking brain imaging and analysis of molecular pathology. In contrast to informal clinical evaluations of oculomotor dysfunction frequency (previous studies: 38%, current clinical examination: 33%), detailed eyetracking investigations revealed eye movement abnormalities in 80% of patients with posterior cortical atrophy (compared to 17% typical Alzheimer’s disease, 5% controls). The greatest differences between posterior cortical atrophy and typical Alzheimer’s disease were seen in saccadic performance. Patients with posterior cortical atrophy made significantly shorter saccades especially for distant targets. They also exhibited a significant exacerbation of the normal gap/overlap effect, consistent with ‘sticky fixation’. Time to reach saccadic targets was significantly associated with parietal and occipital cortical thickness measures. On fixation stability tasks, patients with typical Alzheimer’s disease showed more square wave jerks whose frequency was associated with lower cerebellar grey matter volume, while patients with posterior cortical atrophy showed large saccadic intrusions whose frequency correlated significantly with generalized reductions in cortical thickness. Patients with both posterior cortical atrophy and typical Alzheimer’s disease showed lower gain in smooth pursuit compared to controls. The current study establishes that eye movement abnormalities are near-ubiquitous in posterior cortical atrophy, and highlights multiple aspects of saccadic performance which distinguish posterior cortical atrophy from typical Alzheimer’s disease. We suggest the posterior cortical atrophy oculomotor profile (e.g. exacerbation of the saccadic gap/overlap effect, preserved saccadic velocity) reflects weak input from degraded occipito-parietal spatial representations of stimulus location into a superior collicular spatial map for eye movement regulation. This may indicate greater impairment of identification of oculomotor targets rather than generation of oculomotor movements. The results highlight the critical role of spatial attention and object identification but also precise stimulus localization in explaining the complex real world perception deficits observed in posterior cortical atrophy and many other patients with dementia-related visual impairment.
Issue Date: 20-Apr-2015
Date of Acceptance: 17-Feb-2015
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10044/1/49196
DOI: https://dx.doi.org/10.1093/brain/awv103
ISSN: 0006-8950
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Start Page: 1976
End Page: 1991
Journal / Book Title: Brain
Volume: 138
Issue: 7
Copyright Statement: © 2015 The Author. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Guarantors of Brain. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Keywords: Science & Technology
Life Sciences & Biomedicine
Clinical Neurology
Neurosciences
Neurosciences & Neurology
Alzheimer's disease
visual function
parietal lobe
agnosia
oculomotor
FRONTOTEMPORAL LOBAR DEGENERATION
PROGRESSIVE SUPRANUCLEAR PALSY
HUMAN CEREBRAL-CORTEX
SQUARE-WAVE JERKS
ALZHEIMERS-DISEASE
EYE-MOVEMENTS
ATTENTIONAL DISENGAGEMENT
CORTICOBASAL DEGENERATION
PARKINSONIAN SYNDROMES
COGNITIVE IMPAIRMENT
Alzheimer’s disease
Aged
Alzheimer Disease
Atrophy
Corticomedial Nuclear Complex
Female
Fixation, Ocular
Humans
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Male
Middle Aged
Neuropsychological Tests
Ocular Motility Disorders
Pursuit, Smooth
ROC Curve
Saccades
Neurology & Neurosurgery
11 Medical And Health Sciences
17 Psychology And Cognitive Sciences
Publication Status: Published
Appears in Collections:Department of Medicine (up to 2019)