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Testing of Ocular Motility – Evaluation of the Extraocular Muscles Robert P. Rutstein, OD Claudio Busettini, PhD

Testing of Ocular Motility – Evaluation of the Extraocular Muscles

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Testing of Ocular Motility – Evaluation of the Extraocular Muscles. Robert P. Rutstein, OD Claudio Busettini, PhD. Review of the EOMs - Anatomy. Directions of eye movements Ad duction: movement towards the nose Ab duction: movement away from the nose - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Testing of Ocular Motility – Evaluation of the  Extraocular  Muscles

Testing of Ocular Motility – Evaluation of the

Extraocular Muscles Robert P. Rutstein, ODClaudio Busettini, PhD

Page 2: Testing of Ocular Motility – Evaluation of the  Extraocular  Muscles

Review of the EOMs - Anatomy

Page 3: Testing of Ocular Motility – Evaluation of the  Extraocular  Muscles
Page 4: Testing of Ocular Motility – Evaluation of the  Extraocular  Muscles

Directions of eye movements

Adduction: movement towards the nose

Abduction: movement away from the nose(think abduction of a person: taken away)

Elevation: movement upward

Depression: movement downward

Intorsion or incycloduction: torsional rotation towards the nose

Extorsion or excycloduction : torsional rotation away from nose(think extorsion of money: taken away)

Page 5: Testing of Ocular Motility – Evaluation of the  Extraocular  Muscles

Actions of EOMs from Primary Position: Horizontal Recti

Page 6: Testing of Ocular Motility – Evaluation of the  Extraocular  Muscles

Actions of EOMs from Primary Position: Vertical Recti

Page 7: Testing of Ocular Motility – Evaluation of the  Extraocular  Muscles

Superior rectus and inferior rectus have adduction as tertiary actions

(View from above of the right eye)

NOSE

not aligned with pivot point

Page 8: Testing of Ocular Motility – Evaluation of the  Extraocular  Muscles

Actions of EOMs from Primary Position: Obliques

Page 9: Testing of Ocular Motility – Evaluation of the  Extraocular  Muscles

Inferior oblique and superior oblique have abduction as tertiary actions

(View from above of the right eye)

NOSE

not aligned with pivot point

Page 10: Testing of Ocular Motility – Evaluation of the  Extraocular  Muscles
Page 11: Testing of Ocular Motility – Evaluation of the  Extraocular  Muscles

Actions of EOMs not from Primary Position

THE DIRECTION OF ACTION DEPENDS ON WHERE WE ARE WITH RESPECT TO THE MUSCLE PLANE: KEY FACTOR TO CONSIDER WHEN WE TEST OUR PATIENTS LOOKING AWAY FROM PRIMARY POSITION

Page 12: Testing of Ocular Motility – Evaluation of the  Extraocular  Muscles

Field of Action

Page 13: Testing of Ocular Motility – Evaluation of the  Extraocular  Muscles

Innervation: oculomotor nerve(cranial nerve III)

Somatic motor function: innervation of FOUR of the 6 extra-ocular muscles:- Medial rectus- Superior rectus- Inferior rectus- Inferior obliqueand of the levator palpabrae superioris (upper eyelid)Visceral motor function:-parasympathetic innervation of the constrictor pupillae (pupillary light reflex)- ciliary muscle (accommodation reflex)

Page 14: Testing of Ocular Motility – Evaluation of the  Extraocular  Muscles

accommodation and pupil responses

excycloduction

incycloduction

upper eyelid control

Page 15: Testing of Ocular Motility – Evaluation of the  Extraocular  Muscles

Innervation: trochlear nerve(cranial nerve IV) ONLY FUNCTION: CONTROL OF

THE SUPERIOR OBLIQUE MUSCLE

Page 16: Testing of Ocular Motility – Evaluation of the  Extraocular  Muscles

Innervation: abducens nerve(cranial nerve VI) ONLY FUNCTION: CONTROL OF

THE LATERAL RECTUS MUSCLE

Page 17: Testing of Ocular Motility – Evaluation of the  Extraocular  Muscles

1. Cover test in different positions of gaze

2. Versions and ductions

Clinical Testing

Page 18: Testing of Ocular Motility – Evaluation of the  Extraocular  Muscles

Cover test

Page 19: Testing of Ocular Motility – Evaluation of the  Extraocular  Muscles

Versions/Ductions

Page 20: Testing of Ocular Motility – Evaluation of the  Extraocular  Muscles

Versions/Ductions

Page 21: Testing of Ocular Motility – Evaluation of the  Extraocular  Muscles

Oculomotor (III) nerve palsy

Page 22: Testing of Ocular Motility – Evaluation of the  Extraocular  Muscles
Page 23: Testing of Ocular Motility – Evaluation of the  Extraocular  Muscles

Trochlear (IV) nerve palsy

Page 24: Testing of Ocular Motility – Evaluation of the  Extraocular  Muscles
Page 25: Testing of Ocular Motility – Evaluation of the  Extraocular  Muscles

Abducens (VI) nerve palsy

Page 26: Testing of Ocular Motility – Evaluation of the  Extraocular  Muscles

2 yo with unusual eye movements

Page 27: Testing of Ocular Motility – Evaluation of the  Extraocular  Muscles
Page 28: Testing of Ocular Motility – Evaluation of the  Extraocular  Muscles

Eye movement recordings: - binocular viewing - monocular viewing - version/vergence - testing different types of eye movements

Deficits affecting both eyes (central issues)

MRI and fMRI

Laboratory Testing

Page 29: Testing of Ocular Motility – Evaluation of the  Extraocular  Muscles

Electro-oculography (EOG) Limbus tracking (LEDs and FTRs) Videoculography Search coil

Types of eye movement recordings

Page 30: Testing of Ocular Motility – Evaluation of the  Extraocular  Muscles

Electrooculography (EOG)

Page 31: Testing of Ocular Motility – Evaluation of the  Extraocular  Muscles

Videooculography

Page 32: Testing of Ocular Motility – Evaluation of the  Extraocular  Muscles

Search coil

Page 33: Testing of Ocular Motility – Evaluation of the  Extraocular  Muscles

Example ofoculomotordata

Page 34: Testing of Ocular Motility – Evaluation of the  Extraocular  Muscles

Example of damage to the trochlear nerve in a monkey

Page 35: Testing of Ocular Motility – Evaluation of the  Extraocular  Muscles

MRIDumars et al. (2008)Magnetic resonance imaging of the endophenotype of a novel familial Möbius-like syndrome

Quasi-coronal MRI of posterior right orbit (left column), mid-orbit (middle column), and anterior orbit (right column) for Case1 (top row), Case 2(middle row), and Case 3 ( bottom row). As seen in the left column, the extraocular muscles are hypoplastic in the posterior orbit and motor nerves arebarely detectable. There is relative sparing of the medial rectus (MR) muscles, which appear larger than the inferior (IR), lateral (LR), and SR muscles in the posterior orbit. Note larger rectus muscle cross sections in the mid-orbit (middle column) and anterior orbit (right column), although the levator muscleremains attenuated in the anterior orbit (right column). Note infraplacement of the lateral rectus (LR) relative to the medial rectus (MR) in Cases 1 and 2.