CONGENITAL AND LATENT MANIFEST LATENT NYSTAGMUS - DIAGNOSIS, TREATMENT, FOVEATION, OSCILLOPSIA, AND ACUITY

Authors
Citation
Lf. Dellosso, CONGENITAL AND LATENT MANIFEST LATENT NYSTAGMUS - DIAGNOSIS, TREATMENT, FOVEATION, OSCILLOPSIA, AND ACUITY, Japanese Journal of Ophthalmology, 38(3), 1994, pp. 329-336
Citations number
50
Categorie Soggetti
Ophthalmology
ISSN journal
00215155
Volume
38
Issue
3
Year of publication
1994
Pages
329 - 336
Database
ISI
SICI code
0021-5155(1994)38:3<329:CALMLN>2.0.ZU;2-E
Abstract
Congenital (CN) and latent/manifest latent nystagmus (LMLN) are the tw o most common types of benign infantile nystagmus. They can be disting uished definitively by eye-movement recordings; their clinical charact eristics are too similar to allow reliable differential diagnosis. Mos t treatments for CN, surgical or optical, depend on exploitation of ei ther a gaze-angle or convergence null. Other treatments are emerging t hat may prove beneficial for those individuals lacking either of these nulls. Early surgical treatment for the strabismus accompanying LMLN may convert the nystagmus into LN only, thereby improving visual acuit y (OU). Target foveation is preserved in both CN and LMLN and repetiti ve (cycle-to-cycle) foveation periods appear to be responsible for the absence of oscillopsia in these individuals. The ability to foveate a target for substantial periods of time each cycle, with little variat ion in eye position or velocity, may result in normal visual acuities despite the nystagmus.