Br J Ophthalmol 2001;85:428-431
( April )
Spontaneous reversal of nystagmus in the dark
Fatima S Shawkata, Christopher M Harrisa b, David S I Taylora
a Department of
Ophthalmology, Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children NHS Trust,
London WC1 N 3JH, UK, b Plymouth Institute of Neuroscience,
University of Plymouth, Drake Circus, Plymouth, UK
Correspondence to: Dr Shawkat fatima{at}gordonreid.net
Accepted for publication 13 December 2000
AIM
To report five
children with horizontal jerk nystagmus in whom eye movement recordings
in the dark revealed a spontaneous reversal in the direction of the
nystagmus beat. Three patients were blind in one eye and were diagnosed
as having a manifest latent nystagmus (MLN), and two patients had
strabismus and congenital nystagmus (CN).
METHODS
Eye movements
were recorded using DC electro-oculography with simultaneous video
recording, including infrared recording in total darkness.
RESULTS
Four patients
had decelerating velocity slow phase jerk nystagmus when recorded under
natural lighting conditions; the fifth case had accelerating velocity
and linear slow phase jerk nystagmus. Under absolute darkness,
nystagmus reversed in direction of beat with a mixture of linear and
decelerating velocity slow phase waveforms. One child with unilateral
anophthalmos could wilfully reverse the beat direction of his nystagmus
by trying to look with his blind eye in the light and dark.
CONCLUSIONS
These
observations support the theory that LN/MLN beat direction is
determined by the "presumed" viewing eye and may be consciously controlled. The spontaneous reversal of beat direction in the dark
suggests eye dominance is predetermined. Eye movement recordings identified mixed nystagmus waveforms indicating that CN (accelerating velocity slow phases) and LN/MLN (linear/decelerating velocity slow
phases) coexist in these subjects.
© 2001 by British Journal of Ophthalmology