Smooth Pursuit Eye Movement Deficits in Patients With Whiplash and Neck Pain are Modulated by Target Predictability.

Spine (Phila Pa 1976)

*Department of Neuroscience, Erasmus MC, Rotterdam, The Netherlands †Spine and Joint Centre, Rotterdam, The Netherlands ‡Department of Manual Therapy, Hogeschool Rotterdam, The Netherlands §Erasmus University College, Rotterdam, The Netherlands.

Published: October 2015

AI Article Synopsis

  • This study examines how static neck torsion impacts smooth pursuit eye movements in patients with neck pain and whiplash-associated disorders (WADs) compared to healthy individuals.
  • Previous findings indicated that patients with neck issues had worse eye movement control when their neck was twisted, particularly with predictably moving targets.
  • The results reveal that neck torsion worsens smooth pursuit in patients, especially for predictable movements, suggesting that these disturbances aren't solely due to problems with neck sensation or proprioception.

Article Abstract

Study Design: This is a cross-sectional study.

Objective: The purpose of this study is to support and extend previous observations on oculomotor disturbances in patients with neck pain and whiplash-associated disorders (WADs) by systematically investigating the effect of static neck torsion on smooth pursuit in response to both predictably and unpredictably moving targets using video-oculography.

Summary Of Background Data: Previous studies showed that in patients with neck complaints, for instance due to WAD, extreme static neck torsion deteriorates smooth pursuit eye movements in response to predictably moving targets compared with healthy controls.

Methods: Eye movements in response to a smoothly moving target were recorded with video-oculography in a heterogeneous group of 55 patients with neck pain (including 11 patients with WAD) and 20 healthy controls. Smooth pursuit performance was determined while the trunk was fixed in 7 static rotations relative to the head (from 45° to the left to 45° to right), using both predictably and unpredictably moving stimuli.

Results: Patients had reduced smooth pursuit gains and smooth pursuit gain decreased due to neck torsion. Healthy controls showed higher gains for predictably moving targets compared with unpredictably moving targets, whereas patients with neck pain had similar gains in response to both types of target movements. In 11 patients with WAD, increased neck torsion decreased smooth pursuit performance, but only for predictably moving targets.

Conclusion: Smooth pursuit of patients with neck pain is affected. The previously reported WAD-specific decline in smooth pursuit due to increased neck torsion seems to be modulated by the predictability of the movement of the target. The observed oculomotor disturbances in patients with WAD are therefore unlikely to be induced by impaired neck proprioception alone.

Level Of Evidence: 3.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/BRS.0000000000001016DOI Listing

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