Scientific News Health care Diagnostics of diseases EYE MOVEMENT STUDIES TO HELP DIAGNOSE MENTAL ILLNESS
EYE MOVEMENT STUDIES TO HELP
DIAGNOSE MENTAL ILLNESS
Researchers at the University of Illinois at
Chicago are studying subtle abnormalities in eye movements that may one day be
used to diagnose psychiatric disease.
Irregularities in how the eyes track a moving
object reflect defects in the neural circuitry of the brain and appear to
correspond with particular types of mental disorders. Schizophrenic patients,
for example, have difficulty keeping their eyes focused on slow-moving objects.
With new technology, these abnormalities can be measured precisely and compared
with normal patterns.
"Psychiatric illnesses are not well
understood neurologically," said John Sweeney, director of the Center for
Cognitive Medicine in UIC's department of psychiatry. "Eye movement tests
offer a way to investigate abnormalities in the brain that are causing these
disturbances."
The goal, Sweeney said, is to develop eye
movement tests as a simple, noninvasive tool for diagnosing brain disorders,
including schizophrenia, depression and developmental illnesses such as autism.
"At present, however, the field is still in its infancy," he said.
Under a $1.2 million grant from the National
Institute of Mental Health, Sweeney and his colleagues are testing eye movement
patterns in patients diagnosed with psychotic disorders, including schizophrenia,
bipolar disorder and depression, in order to begin to validate eye movement
abnormalities as markers for different brain diseases.
For these studies, participants undergo a
90-minute series of visual tests in a specially designed laboratory. Seated in a
dark room with their heads secured in a chin rest, subjects are shown a pinpoint
of light on the opposite wall. They are asked to focus on the light as it jumps
from one spot to another, to anticipate the location of the light after it has
disappeared and to follow the light as it glides to the left or right at
different speeds.
Various tasks are designed to test the function
in different parts of the brain controlling cognitive operations and eye
movements. One task, for example, tests short-term memory. Subjects are shown a
brief flash of light; after a several-second delay, they are asked to move their
eyes to the remembered location.
Participants wear infrared spectacles, called
scleral-reflection glasses, which are linked to a nearby computer that records
small movements of the eyes very precisely. The measurements are made using
software developed in Sweeney's laboratory. Participants also complete similar
tasks in an MRI scanner, enabling the researchers to observe the corresponding
brain activity directly. With the scanner, the brain regions controlling
different types of eye movements are systematically investigated one at a time.
Sweeney and his colleagues, who have been
studying eye movement patterns for 20 years, are using their laboratory to
document impairments associated with disease and injury and to chart the course
of brain and cognitive development from ages 8 to 15. During that period, the
brain undergoes important changes affecting eye movement control.
Neurodevelopmental disorders can interfere with this maturation.
"Eye movement studies provide a noninvasive
way to gain a deeper understanding of the brain dysfunctions at the root of
psychiatric illnesses," said Sweeney. "We are following patients over
time to monitor the progression of their disease and determine whether different
treatments are improving their brain and cognitive function."
With this information Sweeney hopes to develop
the tools needed to improve the diagnosis and treatment of psychiatric illnesses.
"And in the long-term future," he said,
"through our efforts to link eye movement and cognitive abnormalities to
their underlying genetic causes, we hope to be able to identify high-risk
individuals and someday prevent the onset of some of the most common and severe
brain disorders that now overwhelm our mental health treatment services."
###
For more information about the UIC
department of psychiatry, visit http://www.psych.uic.edu/.
Contact: Sharon Butler, sbutler@uic.edu,
312-355-2522, University
of Illinois at Chicago
Source of the given news and the copyrights
belong to a University
of Illinois at Chicago
Publishing date: June 24, 2003
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