The ultimate role of ocular movements is to keep the image of an object within the fovea and thereby prevent image slippage on the retina. Accurate evaluations of eye movements provide very useful information for understanding the functions of the oculomotor system and determining abnormalities therein. Such evaluations also play an important role in enabling accurate diagnoses by identifying the location of lesions and discriminating from other diseases. There are various types of ocular movements, and this article focuses on saccades, fast eye movements, smooth pursuit, and slow eye movements, which are the most important types of eye movements used in evaluations performed in clinical practice.
Citations
Citations to this article as recorded by
COMPARISON OF RANDOM SACCADE TEST AND CLINICAL SACCADOMETRY TEST RESULTS OF HEALTHY ELDERLY AND YOUNG INDIVIDUALS Gülce KİRAZLI, Gökçe SAYGI UYSAL, Ece ÇINAR, Aykut ÖZDOĞAN, Şüheda BARAN, Fatih TEKİN Turkish Journal of Geriatrics.2025;[Epub] CrossRef
Analysis of Eye Movements in Adults with Spinal Muscular Atrophy Marek Krivošík, Zuzana Košutzká, Marián Šaling, Veronika Boleková, Rebeka Brauneckerová, Martin Gábor, Peter Valkovič Medicina.2025; 61(4): 571. CrossRef
Vestibular dysfunction has rarely been reported in MELAS syndrome. A 40-year-old male with long-term diabetes and hearing loss experienced a stroke-like episode with hemisensory disturbance and lactic acidosis. Brain MRI showed temporo-parieto-occipital cortical lesions, and a final diagnosis was made of MELAS syndrome with the mitochondrial 3243A>G mutation. Neuro-otologic evaluations revealed anterior-canal-sparing bilateral impairments of the vestibulo-ocular reflex in the video head impulse test and no caloric paresis. This unique pattern of vestibular dysfunction may aid in diagnosing MELAS syndrome.