Affiliation:
1. Department of Ophthalmology, David Geffen Medical School, University of California, Los Angeles, California; and
2. Department of Neurology, David Geffen Medical School, University of California, Los Angeles, California
Abstract
Activity in horizontal rectus extraocular muscles (EOMs) was investigated by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of humans during asymmetric convergence to a monocularly aligned target at 15-cm distance or monocular fixation of afocal targets placed over a wide range of conjugate abduction through adduction. Cross sections and posterior partial volumes (PPVs) of EOMs were determined from quasi-coronal image planes and were separately analyzed in the inferior vs. superior compartments, defined by lines bisecting their maximum vertical dimensions. Both inferior and superior compartments of medial (MR) and lateral (LR) rectus exhibited contractile changes in PPV and maximum cross section for both asymmetric convergence and a comparable range of conjugate adduction. Both LR compartments, and the inferior MR compartment, exhibited similar decreases in contractility correlating with relaxation during both convergence and conjugate adduction. In contrast, the superior MR compartment exhibited roughly three times the contractility in conjugate adduction as in similar-magnitude convergence. In the aligned eye that did not move during convergence, summed contractility in all compartments of MR and LR exhibited corelaxation consistent with published EOM force measurements in this paradigm (Miller JM, Bockisch CJ, Pavlovski DS. J Neurophysiol 87: 2421–2433, 2002; Miller JM, Davison RC, Gamlin PD. J Neurophysiol 105: 2863–2873, 2011). The superior MR compartment also exhibited significantly greater contractility than the other compartments over the maximum achievable horizontal globe rotation from abduction to adduction. These findings suggest that the superior MR compartment is controlled differentially from the inferior compartment and suggest that its activity is reduced during convergence as a component of generally altered extraocular mechanics.
Publisher
American Physiological Society
Subject
Physiology,General Neuroscience
Cited by
42 articles.
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