Dorsal midbrain syndrome

Abstract
We report clinical and oculographic findings in seven patients with the dorsal midbrain syndrome (Parinaud's syndrome). All presented with limited upward voluntary gaze and convergence nystagmus with attempted upward voluntary gaze. Quantitative analysis of vertical eye movements documented characteristic abnormalities of saccades with relative preservation of reflex eye movements (ie, vestibular, optokinetic, and visual-vestibular). Vertical saccade velocity was only slightly decreased in five patients with tumors, indicating that the vertical burst neurons in the mesencephalic reticular formation and their efferent pathways to the oculomotor neurons were minimally damaged. On the other hand, two patients with probable brainstem encephalitis exhibited marked slowing of vertical saccades, indicating that the burst neurons, or their efferent pathways to the oculomotor neurons, were severely damaged.

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