Abstract

We describe three patients with spontaneous pendular oscillation of the eye during funduscopy. All patients had blurred, shimmering vision or oscillopsia, exacerbated by concentration, reading, or trivial head movements, and had a history of unsteadiness. Examination revealed a fine head tremor, mild unsteadiness, absent vestibulo-ocular reflex (VOR), and otherwise normal neurologic and ocular motor findings. Rigid immobilization of the head abolished the retinal oscillations. Simultaneous precision recordings of head and eye movements showed that the eye movement was in the compensatory direction to the head tremor but that, in contrast to normal VOR, it was in phase error. We conclude that the essential head tremor was provoking oscillopsia and retinal oscillation because of the absence of VOR. Recognizing the association of head tremor with absent VOR is important since in all these patients the presence of this pendular pseudonystagmus on ophthalmoscopy raised the diagnostic possibility of brain-stem disease.

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