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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 81 No. 2 February 1999, pp. 668-681
Copyright ©1999 by the American Physiological Society
Department of Physiology and Biophysics and Regional Primate Research Center, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington 98195
Eye movement deficits following ibotenic acid lesions of the nucleus
prepositus hypoglossi in monkeys. II. Pursuit, vestibular, and
optokinetic responses. The eyes are moved by a combination of
neural commands that code eye velocity and eye position. The eye
position signal is supposed to be derived from velocity-coded command
signals by mathematical integration via a single oculomotor neural
integrator. For horizontal eye movements, the neural integrator is
thought to reside in the rostral nucleus prepositus hypoglossi (nph)
and project directly to the abducens nuclei. In a previous study,
permanent, serial ibotenic acid lesions of the nph in three rhesus
macaques compromised the neural integrator for fixation but saccades
were not affected. In the present study, to determine further whether
the nph is the neural substrate for a single oculomotor neural integrator, the effects of those lesions on smooth pursuit, the
vestibulo-ocular reflex (VOR), vestibular nystagmus (VN), and
optokinetic nystagmus (OKN) are documented. The lesions were correlated
with long-lasting deficits in eye movements, indicated most clearly by
the animals' inability to maintain steady gaze in the dark. However,
smooth pursuit and sinusoidal VOR in the dark, like the saccades in the
previous study, were affected minimally. The gain of horizontal smooth
pursuit (eye movement/target movement) decreased slightly (<25%) and
phase lead increased slightly for all frequencies (0.3-1.0 Hz, ±10°
target tracking), most noticeably for higher frequencies (0.8-0.7 and
~20° for 1.0-Hz tracking). Vertical smooth pursuit was not affected
significantly. Surprisingly, horizontal sinusoidal VOR gain and phase
also were not affected significantly. Lesions had complex effects on
both VN and OKN. The plateau of per- and postrotatory VN was shortened
substantially (~50%), whereas the initial response and the time
constant of decay decreased slightly. The initial OKN response also
decreased slightly, and the charging phase was prolonged transiently
then recovered to below normal levels like the VN time constant.
Maximum steady-state, slow eye velocity of OKN decreased progressively by ~30% over the course of the lesions. These results support the
previous conclusion that the oculomotor neural integrator is not a
single neural entity and that the mathematical integrative function for
different oculomotor subsystems is most likely distributed among a
number of nuclei. They also show that the nph apparently is not
involved in integrating smooth pursuit signals and that lesions of the
nph can fractionate the VOR and nystagmic responses to adequate
stimuli.
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