Oculomotor Impairments in Children After Posterior Fossa Tumors Treatment

AbstractPosterior fossa tumors (PFT) are the most common pediatric brain tumors, and the study of the somatic and cognitive status of PFT survivors still remains a critical problem. Since cerebellar damage can affect eye movement centers located in the vermis and hemispheres, such patients suffer from disturbances in visual perception, visual-spatial functions, reading, etc. Our investigation aimed at describing oculomotor impairments in PFT survivors linked to core oculomotor functions assessed through eye tracking method: gaze holding, reflexive saccades, and organization of voluntary saccades and their dependency on age at tumor diagnosis. Also, we investigated the relationship between oculomotor functions and ataxia measured with International Cooperative Ataxia Rating Scale (ICARS). A total of 110 children (patients and age-matched healthy controls, aged 9 –17 years old) participated in the study. We found that the earlier the child had a tumor, the more impaired gaze holding (p = 0.0031) and fewer isometric saccades (p = 0.035) were observed at the time of examination. The above-mentioned functions in healthy controls improved with age. Visual scanning was also impaired compared to controls but was not related to age at diagnosis. A positive correlation between ICARS scores and number of hypermetric saccades (r = 0.309,p = 0.039), but no correlation with the number of hypometric saccades (r = − 0.008,p = 0.956). Furthermore, number of hypometric saccades did not dif...
Source: The Cerebellum - Category: Neurology Source Type: research