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Table of Contents
Terms Used In This Article
brainstem - portion of the brain which connects with the spinal cord;
controls many automatic functions such as heart rate, breathing, and
swallowing
Chiari II - more severe form of Chiari where parts of the brainstem
and cerebellum itself are herniated; associated with spina bifida and
frequently hydrocephalus
fovea - small, central part of the retina in the eye which provides
the sharpest vision
hydrocephalus - condition involving an excess amount of CSF in the
brain
nystagmus - abnormal, rapid, involuntary movements of the eye
ocular - having to do with the eyes
shunt - tube like device implanted to divert CSF from the brain to
another part of the body
spina bifida - birth defect where the spinal cord doesn't close
properly and protrudes; can result in Chiari II and hydrocephalus Common Chiari Terms
cerebellar tonsils -
portion of the cerebellum located at the bottom, so named because of their
shape
cerebellum - part of
the brain located at the bottom of the skull, near the opening to the spinal
area; important for muscle control, movement, and balance
cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) - clear liquid in the brain and spinal
cord, acts as a shock absorber
Chiari malformation I -
condition where the cerebellar tonsils are displaced out of the skull area
into the spinal area, causing compression of brain tissue and disruption of
CSF flow
decompression surgery -
general term used for any of several surgical techniques employed to
create more space around a Chiari malformation and to relieve compression
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May 31, 2007 -- Chiari has been linked to a number of eye problems,
including nystagmus, severe near-sightedness and lazy eye. Now, a team
of researchers from Canada, who have previously published on Chiari related
eye problems, have found that a subset of Chiari II children have abnormal
smooth pursuit.
When a person looks at an object that is moving slowly,
their eyes automatically move to stabilize the image of the object and keep
it in the center of their focal area. These eye movements are known as
smooth pursuit and allow an object to be seen in detail even though it is
moving. Smooth pursuit only refers to looking at slowly moving objects
and is different than saccades, which is where the eyes move as quickly as
possible (or jump) to an object. Saccades results in a momentary
disruption of vision, but smooth pursuit does not.
In a study published in the April, 2007 issue of the
journal, Developmental Medicine & Child Neurology, the Canadian group (Salman
et al.) analyzed the smooth pursuit of 21 Chiari II children and compared
them to a group of healthy controls. The children ranged in age from
8-19 years and all suffered from hydrocephalus as well as MRI verified
Chiari II. None of the children had additional problems which would
affect their eyes and potentially their ocular smooth pursuit, and all had
corrected vision of at least 20/40. To help control the experiment,
none of the children had severe cognitive deficits.
Both the brainstem and cerebellum play important roles
in smooth pursuit functioning, so the researchers hypothesized that the
Chiari II children would exhibit problems when tested as compared to their healthy
counterparts. In addition, the team wanted to see if the level of
spinal lesion (the spina bifida opening) or the number of shunt revisions
the children had undergone influenced their smooth pursuit performance.
To this end, they categorized the children as having upper spinal lesions
(6) or lower spinal lesions (15). Similarly, they grouped the children
by number of shunt of revisions (see Table 1) which would indicate periods
of increased CSF pressure.
An infrared eye tracking device was used to quantify
the smooth pursuit of both the Chiari children and the healthy controls.
The device measured eye position and velocity as the children tracked a slow
moving sinusoid wave (see Figure 2).
Somewhat surprisingly, the researchers found that only
a subset of the Chiari children demonstrated problems with the smooth
pursuit task. Specifically, those children with nystagmus -
involuntary, rapid eye movements - showed abnormal smooth pursuit as
compared to both the healthy controls and the Chiari children without
nystagmus. Conversely, neither level of spinal lesion or number of
shunt revisions had any influence on whether the children had normal smooth
pursuit functioning.
Since the number of shunt revisions was not a factor,
the researchers believe that the smooth pursuit problems are not due to
hydrocephalus, but rather the malformation of the brainstem and cerebellum.
Although they were not able to identify a structural difference between the
children with smooth pursuit problems and those without, since every child
with pursuit problems also had nystagmus, clearly there is something about
their brain structure which is affecting their eye functions.
It is said that the eyes are a window to the soul, but
it also may be that the eyes are a window into some of the more subtle
aspects of Chiari. For now, most of the eye related Chiari research
involves Chiari II, it would be interesting to expand the studies that have
already been done to Chiari I and adults.
- Rick Labuda
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Key Points
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Chiari has been linked to several
problems with the eyes, such as nystagmus, near-sightedness and lazy eye
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The cerebellum and brainstem are
important in controlling the natural movements of the eye when following
something that is moving (smooth pursuit)
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Study examined the smooth pursuit of
21 Chiari II children and compared them to a group of healthy volunteers
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Chiari II with nystagmus had
abnormal smooth pursuit
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However, not all Chiari II children
did
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Anbormal smooth pursuit was not
related to level of spinal defect or number of shunt revisions
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Authors believe the problem is due
to the actual malformation of the cerebellum and brainstem and not
hydrocephalus
Table 1
Number of Shunt Revisions (21 Total Children)
| # of Revisions |
# of Children |
| None |
5 |
| One |
9 |
| Two or More |
7 |
Figure 2
Sinusoid Target
 Source: Salman
MS, Sharpe JA, Lillakas L, Steinbach MJ, Dennis M. Smooth ocular pursuit in
Chiari type II malformation. Dev Med Child Neurol. 2007 Apr;49(4):289-93.
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