Elevated Smooth Pursuit Gain in Collegiate Athletes with Sport-related Concussion Immediately Following Injury.

IF 1.6 Q3 OPHTHALMOLOGY
Journal of Ophthalmic & Vision Research Pub Date : 2024-06-21 eCollection Date: 2024-04-01 DOI:10.18502/jovr.v19i2.12348
Madison R Taylor, Marian Berryhill, Dennis Mathew, Nicholas G Murray
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Purpose: Although there is evidence that sport-related concussion (SRC) affects oculomotor function and perceptual ability, experiments are often poorly controlled and are not replicable. This study aims to test the hypothesis that there are decreased values when assessing oculomotor impairment indicating poorer performance in SRC patients.

Methods: Fifteen DI athletes presenting with SRC (7 females, 8 males) and 15 student volunteers (CON) (12 females, 3 males) completed a dynamic visual acuity (DVA) task that involved answering the direction of a moving stimulus (Landolt C) while wearing a head-mounted binocular eye tracker. There were 120 trials total with 60 trials presenting at 30º per second and 60 presenting at 90º per second. Various eye movement measurements, including horizontal smooth pursuit eye movements (SPEM) gain and saccadic peak velocity, were analyzed between groups using univariate ANOVAs. Saccade count in SPEM trials, accuracy, and vision were analyzed using Kruskal-Wallis tests.

Results: There was no statistical difference in saccadic peak velocity: SRC = 414.7 ± 42º/s, CON = 406.6 ± 40.6º/s. A significant difference was found between SRC patients and healthy controls in horizontal SPEM gain (SRC = 0.9 ± 0.04, CON = 0.86 ± 0.03, F(1,28) = 7.243, P = 0.012) indicating that patients demonstrated compensatory eye movements when tracking the target. There were significantly more saccades in all SPEM trials (P = 0.001).

Conclusion: SRCoculomotor deficits manifest as elevated horizontal SPEM gain when assessed within 48 hours of injury and compared to healthy controls within the same age range. SRC demonstrates altered oculomotor ability. While accurate in tracking a stimulus, SRC patients may conduct less controlled eye movements.

运动相关脑震荡的大学生运动员在受伤后立即出现平滑追逐增益。
目的:虽然有证据表明运动相关脑震荡(SRC)会影响眼球运动功能和知觉能力,但实验往往控制不佳,且不可复制。本研究旨在验证一个假设,即在评估 SRC 患者的眼球运动障碍时,其值会降低,这表明患者的表现较差:15 名患有 SRC 的 DI 运动员(7 名女性,8 名男性)和 15 名学生志愿者(CON)(12 名女性,3 名男性)在佩戴头戴式双目眼动仪的情况下完成了一项动态视敏度(DVA)任务,其中包括回答移动刺激物(Landolt C)的方向。共进行了 120 次试验,其中 60 次以每秒 30º 的速度进行,60 次以每秒 90º 的速度进行。采用单变量方差分析法分析了各组之间的各种眼动测量结果,包括水平平滑追随眼动(SPEM)增益和囊回峰值速度。使用 Kruskal-Wallis 检验分析了 SPEM 试验中的囊状移动次数、准确性和视力:结果:各组之间的回扫峰值速度无统计学差异:SRC=414.7±42º/s,CON=406.6±40.6º/s。在水平 SPEM 增益方面,SRC 患者与健康对照组之间存在明显差异(SRC = 0.9 ± 0.04,CON = 0.86 ± 0.03,F(1,28) = 7.243,P = 0.012),这表明患者在追踪目标时表现出补偿性眼动。在所有 SPEM 试验中,患者的囊视次数明显增多(P = 0.001):结论:与同年龄组的健康对照组相比,在受伤 48 小时内进行评估时,SRCoculomotor 缺陷表现为水平 SPEM 增益升高。SRC 表现出眼球运动能力的改变。虽然能准确追踪刺激物,但 SRC 患者的眼球运动控制能力较弱。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
63
审稿时长
30 weeks
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