PLoS ONE (Jan 2014)

Eye movements in ephedrone-induced parkinsonism.

  • Cecilia Bonnet,
  • Jan Rusz,
  • Marika Megrelishvili,
  • Tomáš Sieger,
  • Olga Matoušková,
  • Michael Okujava,
  • Hana Brožová,
  • Tomáš Nikolai,
  • Jaromír Hanuška,
  • Mariam Kapianidze,
  • Nina Mikeladze,
  • Nazi Botchorishvili,
  • Irine Khatiashvili,
  • Marina Janelidze,
  • Tereza Serranová,
  • Ondřej Fiala,
  • Jan Roth,
  • Jonas Bergquist,
  • Robert Jech,
  • Sophie Rivaud-Péchoux,
  • Bertrand Gaymard,
  • Evžen Růžička

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0104784
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 8
p. e104784

Abstract

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Patients with ephedrone parkinsonism (EP) show a complex, rapidly progressive, irreversible, and levodopa non-responsive parkinsonian and dystonic syndrome due to manganese intoxication. Eye movements may help to differentiate parkinsonian syndromes providing insights into which brain networks are affected in the underlying disease, but they have never been systematically studied in EP. Horizontal and vertical eye movements were recorded in 28 EP and compared to 21 Parkinson's disease (PD) patients, and 27 age- and gender-matched healthy subjects using standardized oculomotor tasks with infrared videooculography. EP patients showed slow and hypometric horizontal saccades, an increased occurrence of square wave jerks, long latencies of vertical antisaccades, a high error rate in the horizontal antisaccade task, and made more errors than controls when pro- and antisaccades were mixed. Based on oculomotor performance, a direct differentiation between EP and PD was possible only by the velocity of horizontal saccades. All remaining metrics were similar between both patient groups. EP patients present extensive oculomotor disturbances probably due to manganese-induced damage to the basal ganglia, reflecting their role in oculomotor system.