Impaired Saccade Adaptation in Tremor-Dominant Cervical Dystonia—Evidence for Maladaptive Cerebellum

We examined the role of the cerebellum in patients with tremor-dominant cervical dystonia by measuring the adaptive capacity of rapid reflexive eye movements (saccades). We chose the saccade adaptation paradigm because, unlike other motor learning paradigms, the real-time modification of saccades ca...

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Veröffentlicht in:Cerebellum (London, England) England), 2021-10, Vol.20 (5), p.678-686
Hauptverfasser: Mahajan, Abhimanyu, Gupta, Palak, Jacobs, Jonathan, Marsili, Luca, Sturchio, Andrea, Jinnah, H.A., Espay, Alberto J., Shaikh, Aasef G.
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container_issue 5
container_start_page 678
container_title Cerebellum (London, England)
container_volume 20
creator Mahajan, Abhimanyu
Gupta, Palak
Jacobs, Jonathan
Marsili, Luca
Sturchio, Andrea
Jinnah, H.A.
Espay, Alberto J.
Shaikh, Aasef G.
description We examined the role of the cerebellum in patients with tremor-dominant cervical dystonia by measuring the adaptive capacity of rapid reflexive eye movements (saccades). We chose the saccade adaptation paradigm because, unlike other motor learning paradigms, the real-time modification of saccades cannot “wait” for the sensory (visual) feedback. Instead, saccades rely primarily on the internal reafference modulated by the cerebellum. The saccade adaptation happens over fast and slow timescales. The fast timescale has poor retention of learned response, while the slow timescale has strong retention. Cerebellar defects resulting in loss of function affect the fast timescale but the slow timescale of saccade adaptation is retained. In contrast, maladaptive cerebellar disorders feature the absence of both fast and slow timescales. We were able to measure both timescales using noninvasive oculography in 6 normal individuals. In contrast, both timescales were absent in 12 patients with tremor-dominant cervical dystonia. These findings are consistent with maladaptive cerebellar outflow as a putative pathophysiological basis for tremor-dominant cervical dystonia.
doi_str_mv 10.1007/s12311-020-01104-y
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subjects Adaptation
Biomedical and Life Sciences
Biomedicine
Cerebellum
Dystonia
Motor skill learning
Neck
Neurobiology
Neurology
Neurosciences
Original Paper
Saccadic eye movements
Tremor
title Impaired Saccade Adaptation in Tremor-Dominant Cervical Dystonia—Evidence for Maladaptive Cerebellum
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