Brain Advance Access originally published online on May 4, 2005
Brain 2005 128(6):1237-1246; doi:10.1093/brain/awh532
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Review Article |
Vertical nystagmus: clinical facts and hypotheses
1 INSERM 679 and Service de Neurologie 1 and 2 Service d'Ophtalmologie, Hôpital de la Salpêtrière (AP-HP), Paris, France
Correspondence to: Professeur C. Pierrot-Deseilligny, Service de Neurologie 1, Hôpital de la Salpêtrière, 47 Bd de l'Hôpital, 75651 Paris cedex 13, France E-mail: cp.deseilligny{at}psl.ap-hop-paris.fr
Received March 14, 2005. Accepted April 11, 2005.
| Summary |
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The pathophysiology of spontaneous upbeat (UBN) and downbeat (DBN) nystagmus is reviewed in the light of several instructive clinical findings and experimental data. UBN due to pontine lesions could result from damage to the ventral tegmental tract (VTT), originating in the superior vestibular nucleus (SVN), coursing through the ventral pons and transmitting excitatory upward vestibular signals to the third nerve nucleus. A VTT lesion probably leads to relative hypoactivity of the drive to the motoneurons of the elevator muscles with, consequently, an imbalance between the downward and upward systems, resulting in a downward slow phase. The results observed in internuclear ophthalmoplegia suggest that the medial longitudinal fasciculus (MLF) is involved in the transmission of both upward and downward vestibular signals. Since no clinical cases of DBN due to focal brainstem damage have been reported, it may be assumed that the transmission of downward vestibular signals depends only upon the MLF, whereas that of upward vestibular signals involves both the MLF and the VTT. The main focal lesions resulting in DBN affect the cerebellar flocculus and/or paraflocculus. Apparently, this structure tonically inhibits the SVN and its excitatory efferent tract (i.e. the VTT) but not the downward vestibular system. Therefore, a floccular lesion could result in a disinhibition of the SVNVTT pathway with, consequently, relative hyperactivity of the drive to the motoneurons of the elevator muscles, resulting in an upward slow phase. UBN also results from lesions affecting the caudal medulla. An area in this region could form part of a feedback loop involved in upward gaze-holding, originating in a collateral branch of the VTT and comprising the caudal medulla, the flocculus and the SVN, successively. Therefore, it is suggested that the main types of spontaneous vertical nystagmus due to focal central lesions result from a primary dysfunction of the SVNVTT pathway, which becomes hypoactive after pontine or caudal medullary lesions, thereby eliciting UBN, and hyperactive after floccular lesions, thereby eliciting DBN. Lastly, since gravity influences UBN and DBN and may facilitate the downward vestibular system and restrain the upward vestibular system, it is hypothesized that the excitatory SVNVTT pathway, along with its specific floccular inhibition, has developed to counteract the gravity pull. This anatomical hyperdevelopment is apparently associated with a physiological upward velocity bias, since the gain of all upward slow eye movements is greater than that of downward slow eye movements in normal human subjects and in monkeys.
Key Words: downbeat nystagmus; eye movements; vertical nystagmus; vestibulo-ocular reflex; upbeat nystagmus
Abbreviations: BC = brachium conjunctivum; DBN = downbeat nystagmus; INO = internuclear ophthalmoplegia; NI = nucleus intercalatus; NR = nucleus of Roller; MLF = medial longitudinal fasciculus; MVN = media vestibular nucleus; PMT = paramedian tracts; NRTP = nucleus reticularis tegmenti pontis; SVN = superior vestibular nucleus; UBN = upbeat nystagmus; VOR = vestibulo-ocular reflex; VTT = ventral tegmental tract
| Introduction |
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Vertical nystagmus may be either upbeating or downbeating. When present in the straight-ahead position of gaze (i.e. the primary position) it is referred to as upbeat nystagmus (UBN) or downbeat nystagmus (DBN) (Leigh and Zee, 1999
| UBN due to pontine lesions |
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UBN may be due to focal brainstem lesions. Two main groups of patients predominate, the first with pontine lesions and the second with medullary lesions (see below, UBN due to caudal medullary lesions). In cases of UBN due to pontine damage, the lesions are located in the ventral tegmentum and/or the posterior basis pontis, at the upper pons level, and are usually large and bilateral (Troost et al., 1980
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A few patients with UBN attributed to unilateral BC lesions have also been reported (Nakada and Remler, 1981
| Results from internuclear ophthalmoplegia |
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INO is a key syndrome to consider, since the MLF contains vestibular tracts involved in both vertical directions in the cat and the monkey (Carpenter and Cowie, 1985
| Absence of DBN after focal clinical brainstem lesions |
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Thus far, our analysis suggests that excitatory upward vestibular signals are transmitted in the brainstem through both the VTT and the MLF, whereas excitatory downward vestibular signals appear to depend only upon the MLF. With such findings, one must ask whether there is in the brainstem an equivalent of the VTT for the downward system. If so, this tract should be anatomically different both from the VTT, involved only in the upward system, and from the MLF, involved in both vertical systems. However, in contrast to reports of about 30 cases of UBN due to focal brainstem (pontine or caudal medullary) lesions, a careful review of the reported cases of DBN leads to the conclusion that there are no cases of DBN due to a focal brainstem lesion, at least located between the vestibular and IIIrd nuclei (Büttner et al., 1995
| Mechanism of DBN |
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To try to understand how the downward vestibular signals are transmitted to the IIIrd and trochlear nuclei, we must now examine the different causes of DBN. This nystagmus is observed in diverse intoxications and diffuse diseases (encephalitis, etc.), like UBN, but its main causescerebellar atrophy and craniocervical anomaliesare relatively focal and involve regions located outside the brainstem (Leigh and Zee, 1999
The amplitude (eye position) of DBN is variable, ranging between a few degrees and 1015°. In the case of a small DBN (with an amplitude of a few degrees), it seems surprising that the adaptive mechanisms fail to improve or suppress the abnormal movement. However, where there is progressive (degenerative or malformative) or even diffuse damage, these mechanisms may have already been exhausted, resulting in long-lasting DBN, often increasing with time. Lastly, there is currently no obvious explanation for the increase in DBN amplitude (and UBN amplitude as well) frequently observed in lateral gaze and/or convergence. However, malfunctioning of the translational VOR, which uses otolith cues and normally modulates slow-phase velocity according to the angle of vergence and the positions of the eye in the orbit, could be expected in such damage (Leigh and Zee, 1999
), but further specific studies will be needed to resolve this question.
Two particular types of experimental brainstem lesions, without equivalent syndromes in humans, also elicit DBN. First, in the cat, a (primary position) DBN was observed after a muscimol injection made in a subgroup of cells of the paramedian tracts (PMT) (Nakamagoe et al., 2000
). The PMT cells are located between the MLFs, both rostrally and caudally to the abducens nuclei (Büttner-Ennever et al., 1989
). They receive afferent signals from all premotor structures involved in horizontal and vertical eye movements (i.e. the brainstem reticular formations generating saccades as well as the vestibular nuclei controlling slow eye movements) and they project to the flocculus. The rostral PMT subgroup, where damage resulted in DBN (Nakamagoe et al., 2000
), was located just above the level of the abducens nuclei. Electrophysiological recording, performed before the lesion, showed that this area was involved in both upward saccades and VOR. Furthermore, the DBN slow phase induced by the lesion had an exponentially decaying profile, suggesting impaired neural integration (see next section). The interpretation of this DBN was (i) hypoactivity in the (putative excitatory) PMT floccular neurons, which normally receive signals from the SVN, with, therefore, (ii) hypoactivity in the inhibitory flocculo-SVN neurons, and then (iii) disinhibition of the upward vestibular pathway, as after floccular lesions, namely relative hyperexcitation in the drive to the motoneurons of the elevator muscles, and (iv) an upward slow phase. Thus, this rostral subgroup of PMT cells could be involved in the downward gaze-holding system. The absence of an analogous syndrome in humans may be explained by the very particular location of this subgroup of PMT cells, namely between the MLFs, with therefore the impossibility of observing a specific clinical lesion of the PMT cells without associated damage to the MLFs. Since the MLFs are involved in both the upward and the downward vestibular systems, a lesion affecting both these fascicles and the PMT cells probably results in relatively balanced deficits between the two vertical systems, thus eliciting only vertical gaze-evoked nystagmus, not nystagmus in the straight-ahead position of gaze. Secondly, in the monkey, midsagittal pontomedullary sectioning of the posterior tegmentum resulted in bilateral INO and DBN (De Jong et al., 1980
). INO was explained by the interruption of abducens nucleus interneurons decussating before ascending in the MLFs. The same lesion could also involve the excitatory upward and downward vestibular neurons passing through the MLFs and decussating at the same caudal brainstem level. The interpretation of the DBN in this experiment is difficult, since it could have resulted (i) from damage to the same PMT cells mentioned above in the cat, and/or (ii) from the interruption of the mainly inhibitory vestibular commissural system (Ito, 1982
; Fukushima and Kaneko, 1995
), connecting the two SVNs and thus resulting in disinhibition of these nuclei and hyperexcitation of the downstream pathway. However, whatever the mechanism of the DBN in these midsagittal lesions and the actual role of the rostral subgroup of PMT cells, both these experiments probably resulted in hyperactivity of the SVNs, as after floccular lesions, without therefore any further argument for the existence in the downward system of an ascending vestibular tract equivalent to the VTT.
Accordingly, in DBN, both eye velocity and eye position signals appear to be impaired in most cases, suggesting imbalance both in the central vestibular connections and in the vertical gaze-holding system. It may be assumed that the specific inhibitory flocculo-SVN tract involved in the downward VOR normally inhibits the specific excitatory SVNVTT pathway involved in the upward VOR, as shown by experimental data (Hirai and Uchino, 1984
; Sato and Kawasaki, 1990
; Uchino et al., 1994
). However, such an organization with a specific inhibitory flocculovestibular pathway involved in downward eye movements does not really solve the problem of the apparently missing excitatory downward vestibular tract, compared with the upward vestibular system, in particular for the movements performed between the straight-ahead position of gaze and downgaze, where a simple inhibitory mechanism is usually not sufficient to overcome the orbital viscoelastic forces. Another mechanism, not involving a further downward excitatory vestibular tract, might, however, be involved (see below, Role of gravity in vertical nystagmus and VOR).
Before leaving the mechanisms of DBN, it should be noted that a specific impairment of smooth pursuit has at times been suggested to account for this nystagmus (Leigh and Zee, 1999
). In support of the smooth pursuit hypothesis, it has recently been shown that DBN may be transitorily reproduced in healthy subjects after prolonged training using asymmetrical smooth pursuit stimulation (Marti et al., 2005a
). However, such a result does not constitute evidence that the cerebellar pathological DBN is also due to specific smooth pursuit impairment. Moreover, the vertical VOR and optokinetic nystagmus (optokinetic nystagmus) were not tested in this study. The results could simply confirm that, at the cerebello-brainstem level, smooth pursuit and all other slow eye movements share similar structures and mechanisms, with an analogous imbalance in favour of the upward system (see Conclusions). Therefore, even though the smooth pursuit system is obviously involved in the vertical slow eye-movement disturbances in DBN (and also in UBN), there is no definite evidence that the smooth pursuit impairment could be the primary cause of spontaneous vertical nystagmus.
| UBN due to caudal medullary lesions |
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We have already noted two different focal clinical causes of vertical nystagmus, the first related to VTT damage in the pons, resulting in UBN, and the second to the impairment of the flocculus, resulting in DBN. However, there is another region involved in the mechanisms of UBN since caudal medullary lesions, usually affecting the paramedian part of the posterior tegmentum bilaterally, result in UBN in humans (Gilman et al., 1977
The UBN amplitude (eye position) in patients with caudal medullary lesions was variable, ranging between 1° or 2° and 10°. In those studies where the outcome was reported, the improvement or disappearance of UBN was also variable, ranging between a few weeks (Janssen et al., 1998
) and a few months (Tilikete et al., 2002
), but with persistence for at least 2 years in one patient (Baloh and Yee, 1989
). Therefore, adaptive mechanisms appear to be possible here, too, as with UBN due to pontine lesions. It should be noted that the vertical VOR was never tested in any of these cases of UBN due to medullary lesions. Lastly, no torsional component was described in these patients, which suggests that the lesions were effectively bilateral since a unilateral lesion of the vertical VOR pathways might be expected to cause a mixed vertical torsional nystagmus (Leigh and Zee, 1999
), as in one pontine case with UBN (C. Pierrot-Deseilligny, D. Milea, J. Sirmai, C. Papeix and S. Rivaud-Péchoux, submitted for publication).
Since an area in the caudal medulla probably belongs to the vertical gaze-holding network, specific abnormalities in the profile of the UBN slow phase could be expected after a lesion of this area. However, the exponential characteristic of the slow phase, theoretically allowing one to distinguish between damage to the gaze-holding neural integrator and an imbalance in other ocular motor pathways, is probably not a reliable sign: (i) it may be difficult to appreciate even using eye movement recordings, especially if there are frequent quick phases; (ii) the waveform of the slow phase was variable in previously reported patients with caudal medullary lesions; (iii) the exponential waveform of the slow phase was intermittent in a patient with a VTT lesion (C. Pierrot-Deseilligny, D. Milea, J. Sirmai, C. Papeix and S. Rivaud-Péchoux, submitted for publication) and was variable in individual patients with UBN (or DBN) (Leigh and Zee, 1999
); and (iv) all the brainstem vestibular pathways are more or less part of the gaze-holding network (Fukushima and Kaneko, 1995
). Lastly, the amplitude of UBN (and also of DBN) often depends upon the vertical position of the eyes in the orbits, since, for example, in UBN due to caudal medullary lesions, the nystagmus amplitude increased in upgaze and decreased in downgaze (Alexander's law) in most cases, the reverse being observed, however, in two cases (Ohkoshi et al., 1998
; Minagar et al., 2001
). Finally, the characteristics of slow phases in UBN due to caudal medullary lesions do not appear to be fundamentally different from those observed in UBN due to pontine lesions.
Accordingly, after this review of the three main clinical focal causes of spontaneous vertical nystagmustwo in the brainstem, causing UBN, one in the flocculus, causing DBNwe suggest that the same pathway is probably involved in these three cases (Fig. 1D). This pathway includes the SVN and the VTT as the excitatory efferent tract. It could also comprise a feedback loop controlled by an area of the caudal medulla, receiving afferent signals from the SVN and projecting to the flocculus through a putative inhibitory tract, and finally, via the well-known inhibitory flocculovestibular tract (Langer et al., 1985a
), to the SVN. Organized in this way, this additional pathway could be either excitatory for the upward system when stimulated at the SVN or the caudal medullary levels, or inhibitory for the same upward system when stimulated at the floccular level.
| Role of gravity in vertical nystagmus and VOR |
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There is now accumulating evidence that gravity also plays an important role in vertical vestibular eye movement physiologymaybe largely via the otolithic system (Halmagyi and Leigh, 2004
| Conclusions |
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One may first conclude that UBN is due to pontine or medullary lesions directly or indirectly resulting in a primary hypoactivity of the excitatory upward SVNVTT pathway, whereas DBN probably results from a primary hyperactivity of the same pathway, due to floccular damage, without, apparently, any major primary involvement of the excitatory downward vestibular pathway in either case. Thus, in all these cases of spontaneous vertical nystagmus, a primary vestibular dysfunction appears to affect the SVNVTT pathway, which could normally supplement the action of the ancillary excitatory upward MVNMLF pathway. Secondly, as stated above, gravity may influence vertical spontaneous nystagmus and the vertical VOR. Since gravity facilitates the downward vestibular system and restrains the upward vestibular system, it may be hypothesized that the additional excitatory upward SVNVTT pathway mainly developed in order to counteract gravitational pull. This pathway would provide a supplement of upward eye velocity vestibular signals (via the SVNVTT) and of upward eye position signals (via the caudal medulla flocculus SVN) to the motoneurons of the elevator muscles. However, the upward VOR, optokinetic nystagmus and smooth pursuit gains are superior to the corresponding downward gains in normal subjects, monkeys and cats (Baloh et al., 1983
Accordingly, the hyperactive upward vestibular system could require permanent inhibition, even when the head is erect. The inhibition could be specifically induced by the otoliths and vision, which, via the flocculus, may modulate the circuit gain to adapt it to the various positions of the head. However, since both the additional excitatory upward SVNVTT pathway and its specific floccular inhibition apparently need to be permanently active to maintain the eyes in the primary position, a lesion affecting the excitatory branches (VTT or caudal medulla) or the inhibitory part (flocculus) is likely to result in UBN or DBN. Compensation is poor in DBN due to progressive floccular lesions because, with the usual degenerative causes and untreated cranio-cervical anomalies, the possibilities of adaptation have probably already been exhausted when the nystagmus occurs: at this stage, the hyperdeveloped upward vestibular system might no longer be inhibited. By contrast, UBN due to acute focal (pontine or medullary) lesions, affecting the additional upward SVNVTT pathway, may improve after a few weeks or months, probably because adaptive mechanisms could involve the undamaged ancillary upward MVNMLF pathway.
| Acknowledgements |
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Many thanks to R. J. Leigh (Cleveland) and D. S. Zee (Baltimore), who read an initial version of the manuscript and made valuable remarks.
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