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Case Reports
. 2001 Dec;108(12):2301-7; discussion 2307-8.
doi: 10.1016/s0161-6420(01)00815-6.

Onset of oscillopsia after visual maturation in patients with congenital nystagmus

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Case Reports

Onset of oscillopsia after visual maturation in patients with congenital nystagmus

R W Hertle et al. Ophthalmology. 2001 Dec.

Abstract

Purpose: To describe the clinical and oculographic characteristics of a cohort of five patients with congenital nystagmus (CN) and late-onset oscillopsia caused by a coincidental decline in other visual and/or ocular motor functions.

Design: Retrospective, observational, case series.

Participants: Five visually mature patients with CN and recent-onset oscillopsia were evaluated clinically and with motility recordings.

Intervention: Eye movement analysis was performed off-line by computer analysis of digitized data. Nystagmus was analyzed for null-zone characteristics, waveforms, frequency, amplitudes, and slow-phase drift velocity during foveation. Surgical and medical treatment of associated ocular conditions in four of five patients.

Main outcome measures: Presence of symptomatic oscillopsia and average time during foveation periods of slow-phase drift velocity less than 10 degrees /second.

Results: One of the five patients had associated rod-cone dystrophy, and another had recurrence of childhood head posturing with return of an eccentric null zone. The remaining three patients had decompensated strabismus associated with their oscillopsia. All five patients complained of oscillopsia in primary position that was relieved in the four who received treatment. Treatment included prismatic correction in one patient and surgery in three. Recordings in primary position after treatment showed increased duration during foveation periods of slow-phase drift velocity less than 10 degrees /second and an overall decreased intensity (amplitude/frequency) of the nystagmus.

Conclusions: Symptomatic oscillopsia in patients with CN is unusual. This visually disturbing symptom can be precipitated by new or changing associated visual sensory conditions (e.g., decompensating strabismus, retinal degeneration). If the associated conditions can be treated, then accompanying oscillopsia may be relieved.

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