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Multiple motor systems in the extraocular muscles of man Robert S. Jampel A concept that may provide new diagnostic formulations and the logic for further research into the physiology of the oculomotor system. T, haps also the laryngeal muscles and tensor tympani). Conclusive evidence for the existence of at least two neuromuscular fiber systems in the extraocular muscles of the cat has accumulated during the past two decades.""5 This evidence is summarized in Table I. Recent morphological and histochemical studies have demonstrated at least two and possibly five structurally different types of motor fibers in the extraocular muscles of man and primates.0' 7 The concept put forward in this paper is that multiple motor systems probably exist in the extraocular muscles of man and primates and that this important idea will eventually lead to greater diagnostic insight into the manifestations of disease and provide a logic for further physiological research. The evidence so far for this concept in man and monkeys is mostly circumstantial and based on clinical observations and primate experiments. Definitive physiological research is needed for proof. This evidence will be dealt with in Table I under the following headings: (1) functional types of eye movements, (2) ontogeny, (3) clinical observations of neurological diseases, and (4) primate experiments. he culmination of more than a half century of research in frog muscle was the demonstration of the existence in that species of a separate and distinct slow or tonic striated muscle system that possessed its own peripheral nerve supply and motor units.1 Thus, the frog has two distinct contractile systems which have different biological functions: a fast or tetanic striate muscle system and a slow or tonic striate muscle system. The latter system is sensitive to acetylcholine and nicotine and yields small, irregular, nonpropagated electrical potentials. Its function is to maintain body postures for long periods without apparent fatigue, e.g., amplexus in the frog. Slow striate muscle systems have been demonstrated in amphibians and reptiles, in the red muscles of birds, in denervated mammalian striated muscle, and in the extraocular muscles of vertebrates (mainly the cat). As the phylogenetic scale ascends to the mammalian level it appears that the unique slow striated systems become limited to the extraocular muscles (per- From the Institute of Ophthalmology, Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center, New York, N. Y. Experimental research on primates cited in this paper was supported by United States Public Health Service Grant NB 04547. Evidence for the concept Functional types of eye movements. Based on selected experimental techniques, 288 Downloaded From: http://iovs.arvojournals.org/pdfaccess.ashx?url=/data/journals/iovs/933621/ on 05/09/2017 Physiology of oculomotor system 289 Volume 6 Number 3 Table I. Neuromiiscular fiber systems in the extraocular muscles of mammals Slow, multinucleated striate fibers (Felclenstruktur) Physiology 1. Response to stimulation 2. Nerve velocity 3. Fusion frequency Anatomy 1. Myofibrils 2. Nerve endings 3. Nerve diameters Fast twitch striate fibers (Fibrillenstruktur) Slow maintained graded contraction, Rapid transient contraction, action potential, all or none impulse (?) no action potentials displayed, activity, end-plate potentials graded multiple junctional potentials 2 to 8 m. per second (frog) 8 to 40 m. per second (frog) 30 stimuli per second 350 stimuli per second Large, irregularly separated, poorly Small, regularly separated (by sarcoplasmic reticulum), punctate, defined; incomplete sarcoplasmic well defined; abundant sarcoreticulum, no transverse tubules plasmic reticulum, transverse and triads, located in outer core tubules and triads present, located of muscle in inner core of muscle Multiple small, irregularly distributed Large individual end plate ("en motor terminals ("en grappe"); no plaque"); invaginating sarcoleminvaginating sarcolemmal folds mal folds, extensive sole plate under nerve terminals, decreased sarcoplasm sole plate sarcoplasm Over 8 /* (cat's superior oblique) 3 to 8 jit (cat's superior oblique) Pharmacology 1. Acetylcholine Contracture 2. Succinylcholine Increases resting tension 3. Epinephrine (?) Increases tension 4. Curare Decreases muscle tension* 5. Edrophonium and neo- Increases muscle tension stigmine No effect Decreases twitch response (?) No effect Decreases twitch response Increases twitch response "Under unique conditions increases muscle tension. complex integrated oculomotor activity in man has been fragmented into six parts by various investigators to facilitate study.8"12 These parts, which are listed in Tables II and III, have been shown to have different physiological characteristics. There are two fundamental types of eye movements (Table II): fast or saccadic movements and slow or tonic movements. These basic types can be further divided into subtypes. The fast movement can be divided into the so-called involuntary (? optically elicited movement or fast phase of vestibular nystagmus), the "microsaccade," and the voluntary saccade. The slow movements can be subdivided into the so-called vestibular, "microdrift," following or pursuit, and vergence movements. The extraocular muscles interact with the visual and vestibular sensory systems, which are complex sensoiy inputs, and they appear to have more physiologically different functions than general skeletal muscles. A natural idea is that these functions might be represented by separate central and peripheral nervous mechanisms. The extraocular muscles contain a relatively large muscle mass when compared to other muscles and are capable of exerting many times more contractile power than is required to move the eye between two fixation points.13 Also, the extraocular muscles in man produce extremely rapid (saccadic) movements as well as sustained contractions for the maintenance of eye position. These facts suggest that the various motor units that comprise the extraocular muscles subserve different functions rather than simply adding to the contractile power of the muscle. This idea gains some support from the following experiment in the monkey, which shows how little muscle mass is required to displace the eye: Contralateral conjugate gaze was Downloaded From: http://iovs.arvojournals.org/pdfaccess.ashx?url=/data/journals/iovs/933621/ on 05/09/2017 290 Investigative Ophthalmology June 1967 Jampel Table II. The basic types of eye movements in man Saccadic Bring image on the fovea by one or more rapid movements; may occur in trains with intervals of 100 to 150 msec. Tonic Maintains image on fovea when the head moves; stabilization, vergence. Response to the movements of the image across the retina Synonyms Phasic, jerky, version, ballistic, exploratory Smooth tracking, pursuit, following Reaction time and velocity Conjugate movements: reaction time 150 to 250 msec; velocity 200 to 500 degrees per second Disjunctive movements: none Conjugate movements: velocity up to 40 degrees per second, linearly related to target velocity Disjunctive movements: reaction time about 160 msec; velocity about 25 degrees per second; velocity is a function of stimulus amplitude and then an asymptotic decline until a final level is reached in a total time of 800 msec. Characteristics Ballistic—preset, follows course Guided—under continuous control, precise match between target and eye velocity. Conjugate tonic movements depend on saccade to bring about fixation Function Neuromuscular system fiber inevitable Feldenstruktur (tonic) Fibrillenstruktur (twitch) Table III. Functional types of eye movements in man Ontogeny, in order of appearance after birth 1. Vestibular Type of movement Tonic (stabilization) 2. O.E.M. (optically elic- Saccadic ited movements) involuntary movement to fixate a target in the visual field Sensory input Clinical testing source method Gravity, head and body Doll's head; calorie stimulation movement, via labyrinth Moving image on periph- Hold object field (can eral retina only when movements 3. Fixation movements Drift-(?) tonic, micro- Fovea drift; flick-(?) saccadic, microsaccade; tremor- 4. Following or pursuit Tonic Fovea in visual be tested exploratory are absent) None Move object slowly across the visual field in horizontal plane 5. Exploratory (voluntary) Saccadic Cerebral cortex (? fron- Command patient to tal cortex move eyes in horizontal plane 6. Vergence and fusion Retina, cortical integra- Move object in sagittal tion plane; cover test Tonic "Position in ontogeny unknown. Downloaded From: http://iovs.arvojournals.org/pdfaccess.ashx?url=/data/journals/iovs/933621/ on 05/09/2017 Volume 6 Number 3 evoked from the frontal cortical eye-field by faradic stimulation. The insertion of the lateral rectus on the side opposite the stimulated frontal eye-field was exposed. The insertion of this muscle was cut and stripped back in 1 mm. steps from the globe, and after each small cut a stimulus was applied to the frontal cortex. The velocity and amplitude of the evoked conjugate movement remained the same until all but less than 1 mm. of the muscle remained attached to the globe. Ontogeny. In postnatal development more complex oculomotor functions are superimposed on more primitive functions in a definite order, as indicated in Tables III and IV. The same fact is discernible in the phylogeny of ocular motor function. The earliest eye movements (actually ocular stabilization when the head or body moves) are tonic and are initiated by the vestibular stimulation. Grafted on these primitive stabilization movements are involuntary saccadic movements, tonic following or pursuit movements, saccadic exploratory movements, and tonic vergence movements in that sequence. Tonic and saccadic movements are alternately added in increasing complexity as development progresses (Tables III and IV). Clinical observations of neurological diseases. In diseases of the central nervous system the normally integrated, smoothfunctioning eye movements may be broken down into their component parts, the socalled oculomotor dissociations. In these Table IV. The ontogeny of eye movements in man 1. Tonic vestibular stabilization movements: (?) light causes conjugation; present at birth 2. Involuntary saccades: "cogwheel" movements, random phasic movements, optically elicited movements, movements of regard; present about 2 weeks 3. Fixation micromovements: time present unknown 4. Following movements: from 2 to 4 months 5. Exploratory saccades: from 3 to 5 months 6. Vergence (convergence) movements: present about 6 months Physiology of oculomotor system 291 dissociations slow eye movements are frequently isolated from fast movements and conversely. Examples of these malfunctions follow. Internuclear ophthalmoplegia. This syndrome is the most common and best known "dissociation" syndrome.1'1 Its most significant characteristic is the loss or impairment of vestibular tracking, and exploratory movements of the medial rectus muscle while tonic vergence movements are preserved. In this situation the newest function phylogenetically is preserved while more primitive functions are lost. This splitting of function is caused by a lesion in the medial longitudinal fasciculus in the brainstem. Vergence paralysis. Paralysis and paresis of convergence and divergence may occur while normal conjugate deviations are preserved. This clinical phenomenon may be considered the reverse of internuclear ophthalmoplegia and the responsible lesion is probably in the pretectum of the midbrain. Vergence movements also appear impaired in the diffuse transient cortical injury that may follow trauma. Conjugate gaze paralysis. In vertical or horizontal gaze paralysis there may be an absence of exploratory and pursuit eye movements while vestibular induced movements are preserved. This phenomenon is illustrated by the so-called doll's head phenomenon. The lesion is at a level at which impulses for exploratory and pursuit eye movements are blocked probably in the tegmentum of the midbrain (vertical gaze) and the pons (horizontal gaze) and only impulses from the vestibular nuclei reach the ocular motor nuclei. Rarely vestibular and following eye movements are preserved while exploratory movements are absent. The lesion producing this latter phenomenon is assumed to be at a higher brain level than the one cited first. In certain degenerative neurological diseases the ontogenetic development of eye movements is recapitulated in reverse, that is, the more complex functions are gradually lost during the early stages of the disease, uncovering Downloaded From: http://iovs.arvojournals.org/pdfaccess.ashx?url=/data/journals/iovs/933621/ on 05/09/2017 292 Jampel the primitive tonic vestibular oculomotor functions.5 Ocular stabilization phenomena. In upward gaze paralysis, e.g., in Parenaud's syndrome, the eyes are not deviated downward by the unopposed action of the downward rotators as might be expected. Thus, the eyes are stabilized in the horizontal plane and in horizontal gaze, although upward vestibular, pursuit, and exploratory movements are lost. Downward movements remain normal during early phases of the syndrome. These stabilization phenomena are probably the result of an unknown innei'vational mechanism to the extraocular muscles, since tonus in the elevating muscles appears maintained. Incomplete tonic conjugate deviations. In some neurological lesions gaze amplitudes become limited. Thus the eyes might tonically move horizontally or vertically for a part of the normal excursion and then abruptly stop. It appears as if the yolk muscles receive an amount of innervation that is sufficient to move the eyes a certain distance and no further, and that the tonic gaze mechanism is partially innervated. Congenital and acquired ocular motor "apraxia." The essence of these syndromes is that the saccadic or fast eye movements are impaired or absent while the slow tonic movements are preserved (Table V). The patient appears to have uninhibited vestibular ocular movements. Since a saccade is necessary to initiate a pursuit (follow- Table V. Ocular motor apraxia A. Congenital 1. Abnormal or absent smooth tracking and exploratory eye movements 2. Uninhibited vestibular tonic eye movements 3. Absence of the fast phase of opticokinetic nystagmus 4. Random saccades may be present B. Acquired—Balint's syndrome 1. Loss of exploratory (voluntary) eye movements 2. Loss of pursuit or tracking eye movements 3. Vestibular eye movements preserved Investigative Ophthalmology June 1967 ing) movement the pursuit movements appear abnormal. Primate experiments. Electrical stimulations in the frontal or occipital eye-fields of the monkey have evoked oculomotor responses that were either tonic or phasic (saccadic) or a combination of both. Even when an attempt was made to control all known variables it was not possible to predict the type of response with certainty, except that anesthesia appeared to suppress saccadic movements. The effects of electrical stimulation of the same sites in the cortex are frequently not identical in the same or different animals when stimulated consecutively or during different experiments. Also, stimulating corresponding cortical areas in both frontal eye-fields, either simultaneously or consecutively, frequently evokes different types of eye movement response. Cortical mechanisms appear to exist for the initiation of both slow and fast eye movements, but no specific anatomical localization has been demonstrated. Tonic or saccadic eye movements were evoked from sites within the reticular formation of the midbrain and pons which give rise to eye movements. The anatomical localization of separate neuronal pathways for slow and fast movements from the cerebral cortex or the brainstem has yet to be accomplished, but these observations suggest the existence of two separate supranuclear and internuclear physiological systems. Similar observations have been made in cats.1'G; 7> rl Comment The evidence for the existence of at least two separate muscle fiber systems in the extraocular muscles of the cat is convincing. The crucial question is whether the same is true of the extraocular muscles of primates. Recently five morphologically and histochemically different types of muscle fibers have been demonstrated in the extraocular muscles of monkeys.7 In man at least two morphologically different fiber types have been demonstrated.0 These anatomical observations suggest that dif- Downloaded From: http://iovs.arvojournals.org/pdfaccess.ashx?url=/data/journals/iovs/933621/ on 05/09/2017 Volume 6 Number 3 Physiology of oculomotor system 293 ferent functions might be served by different muscle fiber systems. In man, either saccadic eye movements and_.tonic eye movements are different modes of action of the same neurological and peripheral muscular apparatus or there are separate neuronal pathways and peripheral motor units responsible for these functions. The latter concept implies two separate parallel pathways, one for saccadic and one for tonic movements, each having their own separate supranuclear components, subnuclei within the ocular motor nuclear complex, lower motomeuron fibers, and muscle fibers (motor units). These two parallel systems become integrated and modulated by collateral neuronal systems at higher brain levels with complete integration occurring at the cerebral cortex. Ocular motor function is more complex in man than in the cat and additional neuronal and muscular elements probably underlie this increased complexity. I have presented indirect evidence that suggests the presence of multiple motor systems in the extraocular muscles of man. This concept is supported by evidence obtained from physiological studies of eye movements in man, from ontogeny and phylogeny, and from clinical observations. To date I have made no observation that would confound this concept. However, much more and definitive evidence is required to establish it firmly. REFERENCES 1. Peachey, L. D.: Structure and function of slow striated muscle, in Biophysics of physiological and pharmacological actions, 1960, American Association for the Advancement of Science, Pub. 69. 2. Hess, A., and Pilar, G.: Slow fibres in the extraocular muscles of the cat, J. Physiol. 169: 780, 1963. 3. Pilar, C , and Hess, A.: Differences in in- ternal structure and nerve terminals of the slow and twitch muscle fibers in the cat superior oblique, Anat. Rec. 154: 243, 1966. 4. Bach-y-Rita, P., and Furmio, I.: In vivo studies on fast and slow muscle fibers in cat extraocular muscles, J. Gen. Physiol. 49: 1177, .1966. 5. Katz, R. L., and Eakins, K. E.: The effects of succinylcholine decamethonium, hexacarbacholine, gallamine, and dimethyl tubocurarine on the twitch and tonic neuromuscular systems of the cat, J. Pharmacol. & Exper. Therap. 154: 303, 1966. 6. Dietert, S.: The demonstration of different types of muscle fibers in human extraocular muscle by electron microscopy and cholinesterase staining, INVEST. OPHTH. 4: 51, 1965. 7. Miller, J.: Personal communication from Albany Medical College. 8. Dodge, R.: Five types of eye movements in the horizontal meridian plane of the field of regard, Am. J. Physiol. 8: 307, 1903. 9. Westheimer, G.: Eye movement responses to a horizontally moving visual stimulus, Arch. Ophth. 52: 932, 1954. 10. Rashbass, C.: The relationship between saccadic and smooth tracking eye movements, J. Physiol. 159: 326, 1961. 11. Rashbass, C., and Westheimer, G.: Independence of conjugate and disjunctive eye movements, J. Physiol. 159: 361, 1961. 12. Rashbass, C , and Westheimer, G.: Disjunctive eye movements, J. Physiol. 159: 339, 1961. ' 13. Jampel, R. S.: Unpublished data from primates and man. 14. Enoksson, P.: Internuclear ophthalmoplegia and paralysis of horizontal gaze, Acta ophth. 43: 697, 1965. 15. Jampel, R. S., and Quaglio, N. D.: Eye movements in Tay-Sachs disease, Neurology 14: 1013, 1964. 16. Hyde, J. E., and Eason, R. G.: Characteristics of ocular movements evoked by stimulation of brainstem of cat, J. Neurophysiol. 22: 666, 1959. 17. Hyde, J. E.: Effect of hindbrain lesions on conjugate horizontal eye movement in cats, Exper. Eye Res. 1: 206, 1962. 18. Robinson, D. A.: The mechanics of human smooth pursuit eye movement, J. Physiol. 180: 569, 1965. (End of Symposium) Downloaded From: http://iovs.arvojournals.org/pdfaccess.ashx?url=/data/journals/iovs/933621/ on 05/09/2017