Optomotor response/reflex (OMR) is a fast and efficient first-in-line visual screening method, especially for rodents. It has the potential to evaluate both the scotopic and photopic visions of nonrestrained animals through tracking head movement, providing a quantitative estimate of visual functions. In restrained animals, optokinetic response (OKR), compensatory eye movements for visual shifts in the surroundings, is utilized. Both OMR and OKR capitalize on an individual's innate reflex to stabilize images for the purpose of capturing clear vision. The two reflexes have similar reliability when evaluating stimulus luminance, contrast, spatial frequency, and velocity. They have emerged as powerful tools to evaluate the efficacy of pharmacological treatments and phenotypes of subjects undergoing study. With OMR and OKR accurately assessing visual acuity (VA) as well as contrast sensitivity (CS), the gold standards for measuring clinical vision, they provide reliable and easily accessible results that further eye and brain research. These methods of sight evaluation have been used in multiple animal models, particularly mice and zebrafish. Through OMR assays, these animal models have been utilized to investigate retinal degenerative diseases, helping researchers differentiate between worsening stages. Alongside tests such as optical coherence tomography (OCT), OMR provides confirmation of visual status, where increased OMR function often correlates with improved visual status. OMR has continued to be used outside of glaucoma in various retinal diseases, such as retinitis pigmentosa (RP), diabetic retinopathy, and age-related macular degeneration.In this chapter, we will introduce the concept and application of visual stimulus-induced head or eye reflex movement in different animal species and experimental models of eye diseases, such as glaucoma and other neurodegenerative disorders, and in patients with glaucoma.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-0716-4140-8_18 | DOI Listing |
Methods Mol Biol
October 2024
Department of Ophthalmology, Harvard Medical School, Schepens Eye Research Institute of Massachusetts Eye and Ear, Boston, MA, USA.
Optomotor response/reflex (OMR) is a fast and efficient first-in-line visual screening method, especially for rodents. It has the potential to evaluate both the scotopic and photopic visions of nonrestrained animals through tracking head movement, providing a quantitative estimate of visual functions. In restrained animals, optokinetic response (OKR), compensatory eye movements for visual shifts in the surroundings, is utilized.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDevelopment
December 2022
Centro de Biología Molecular Severo Ochoa (CSIC-UAM), Madrid 28049, Spain.
Appropriate patterning of the retina during embryonic development is assumed to underlie the establishment of spatially localised specialisations that mediate the perception of specific visual features. For example, in zebrafish, an area involved in high acuity vision (HAA) is thought to be present in the ventro-temporal retina. Here, we show that the interplay of the transcription factor Rx3 with Fibroblast Growth Factor and Hedgehog signals initiates and restricts foxd1 expression to the prospective temporal retina, initiating naso-temporal regionalisation of the retina.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Neural Circuits
December 2021
Center for Frontier Research, National Institute of Genetics, Mishima, Japan.
Animals' self-motion generates a drifting movement of the visual scene in the entire field of view called optic flow. Animals use the sensation of optic flow to estimate their own movements and accordingly adjust their body posture and position and stabilize the direction of gaze. In zebrafish and other vertebrates, optic flow typically drives the optokinetic response (OKR) and optomotor response (OMR).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Neurophysiol
July 2017
Retinal Circuit Development & Genetics Unit, Neurobiology Neurodegeneration & Repair Laboratory, National Eye Institute, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland
During animal locomotion or position adjustments, the visual system uses image stabilization reflexes to compensate for global shifts in the visual scene. These reflexes elicit compensatory head movements (optomotor response, OMR) in unrestrained animals or compensatory eye movements (optokinetic response, OKR) in head-fixed or unrestrained animals exposed to globally rotating striped patterns. In mice, OMR are relatively easy to observe and find broad use in the rapid evaluation of visual function.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFExp Eye Res
December 2015
Vision Research Center, Department of Ophthalmology, University of Missouri - Kansas City, School of Medicine, 2411 Holmes St., Kansas City, MO 64108, USA. Electronic address:
Processing of visual information begins in the retina, with photoreceptors converting light stimuli into neural signals. Ultimately, signals are transmitted to the brain through signaling networks formed by interneurons, namely bipolar, horizontal and amacrine cells providing input to retinal ganglion cells (RGCs), which form the optic nerve with their axons. As part of the chronic nature of glaucomatous optic neuropathy, the increasing and irreversible damage and ultimately loss of neurons, RGCs in particular, occurs following progressive damage to the optic nerve head (ONH), eventually resulting in visual impairment and visual field loss.
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