Gaze-evoked nystagmus induced by alcohol intoxication.
Fausto RomanoAlexander A TarnutzerDominik StraumannStefano RamatGiovanni BertoliniPublished in: The Journal of physiology (2017)
Gaze-evoked nystagmus (GEN) is an ocular-motor finding commonly observed in cerebellar disease, characterized by increased centripetal eye-drift with centrifugal correcting saccades at eccentric gaze. With cerebellar degeneration being a rare and clinically heterogeneous disease, data from patients are limited. We hypothesized that a transient inhibition of cerebellar function by defined amounts of alcohol may provide a suitable model to study gaze-holding deficits in cerebellar disease. We recorded gaze-holding at varying horizontal eye positions in 15 healthy participants before and 30 min after alcohol intake required to reach 0.6‰ blood alcohol content (BAC). Changes in ocular-motor behaviour were quantified measuring eye-drift velocity as a continuous function of gaze eccentricity over a large range (±40 deg) of horizontal gaze angles and characterized using a two-parameter tangent model. The effect of alcohol on gaze stability was assessed analysing: (1) overall effects on the gaze-holding system, (2) specific effects on each eye and (3) differences between gaze angles in the temporal and nasal hemifields. For all subjects, alcohol consumption induced gaze instability, causing a two-fold increase [2.21 (0.55), median (median absolute deviation); P = 0.002] of eye-drift velocity at all eccentricities. Results were confirmed analysing each eye and hemifield independently. The alcohol-induced transient global deficit in gaze-holding matched the pattern previously described in patients with late-onset cerebellar degeneration. Controlled intake of alcohol seems a suitable disease model to study cerebellar GEN. With alcohol resulting in global cerebellar hypofunction, we hypothesize that patients matching the gaze-holding behaviour observed here suffered from diffuse deficits in the gaze-holding system as well.