AI Article Synopsis

  • Objective tools for monitoring multiple sclerosis (MS) are currently lacking, but this study looks at using microsaccades—small eye movements—as a way to track motor dysfunction in MS patients.
  • The research involved tracking eye movements in 111 MS patients and 100 control subjects, finding significant correlations between the number of microsaccades and various MS disability measures, including Expanded Disability Status Scale scores and patient-reported fatigue.
  • Results suggest that microsaccades can serve as reliable, objective indicators of MS disability and may predict disease progression effectively.

Article Abstract

Background: Objective tools for prognosis and disease progression monitoring in multiple sclerosis (MS) are lacking. The visuomotor system could be used to track motor dysfunction at the micron scale through the monitoring of fixational microsaccades.

Aims: The aim of this study was to evaluate whether microsaccades are correlated with standard MS disability metrics and to assess whether these methods play a predictive role in MS disability.

Method: We used a custom-built retinal eye tracker, the tracking scanning laser ophthalmoscope (TSLO), to record fixation in 111 participants with MS and 100 unaffected controls.

Results: In MS participants, a greater number of microsaccades showed significant association with higher Expanded Disability Status Scale score (EDSS,  < 0.001), nine-hole peg test (non-dominant:  = 0.006), Symbol Digit Modalities Test (SMDT,  = 0.014), and Functional Systems Scores (FSS) including brainstem ( = 0.005), cerebellar ( = 0.011), and pyramidal ( = 0.009). Both brainstem FSS and patient-reported fatigue showed significant associations with microsaccade number, amplitude, and peak acceleration. Participants with MS showed a statistically different average number ( = 0.020), peak vertical acceleration ( = 0.003), and vertical amplitude ( < 0.001) versus controls. Logistic regression models for MS disability were created using TSLO microsaccade metrics and paraclinical tests with ⩾80% accuracy.

Conclusion: Microsaccades provide objective measurements of MS disability level and disease worsening.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1352458519894712DOI Listing

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