Optokinetic therapy improves text reading in patients with hemianopic alexia

Objective: An acquired right-sided homonymous hemianopia can result in slowed left-to-right text reading, called hemianopic alexia (HA). Patients with HA lack essential visual information to help guide ensuing reading fixations. We tested two hypotheses: first, that practice with a visual rehabilitation method that induced small-field optokinetic nystagmus (OKN) would improve reading speeds in patients with HA when compared to a sham visual rehabilitation therapy; second, that this therapy would preferentially affect reading saccades into the blind field. Methods: Nineteen patients with HA were entered into a two-armed study with two therapy blocks in each arm: one group practiced reading moving text (MT) that scrolled from right to left daily for two 4-week blocks (Group1), while the other had sham therapy (spot the difference) for the first block and then crossed over to MT for the second. Results: Group 1 showed significant improvements in static text reading speed over both therapy blocks (18% improvement), while Group 2 did not significantly improve over the first block (5% improvement) but did when they crossed over to the MT block (23% improvement). MT therapy was associated with a direction-specific effect on saccadic amplitude for rightward but not leftward reading saccades. Conclusion: Optokinetic nystagmus inducing therapy preferentially affects reading saccades in the direction of the induced (involuntary) saccadic component. This is the first study to demonstrate the effectiveness of a specific eye movement based therapy in patients with hemianopic alexia (HA) in the context of a therapy-controlled trial. A free Web-based version of the therapy used in this study is available online to suitable patients with HA.

[1]  A P Leff,et al.  The functional anatomy of single-word reading in patients with hemianopic and pure alexia. , 2001, Brain : a journal of neurology.

[2]  Douglas G Altman,et al.  Treatment allocation by minimisation , 2005, BMJ : British Medical Journal.

[3]  J. Dichgans,et al.  Differential effects of central versus peripheral vision on egocentric and exocentric motion perception , 1973, Experimental Brain Research.

[4]  C. Kennard,et al.  Rehabilitation strategies for patients with homonymous visual field defects. , 2005, Journal of neuro-ophthalmology : the official journal of the North American Neuro-Ophthalmology Society.

[5]  D. Spinelli,et al.  Eye Movement Patterns in Reading as a Function of Visual Field Defects and Contrast Sensitivity Loss , 1996, Cortex.

[6]  J. H. Bertera,et al.  Masking of foveal and parafoveal vision during eye fixations in reading. , 1981, Journal of experimental psychology. Human perception and performance.

[7]  A P Leff,et al.  Impaired reading in patients with right hemianopia , 2000, Annals of neurology.

[8]  R. Davies Bedside neuro-otological examination and interpretation of commonly used investigations , 2004, Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery & Psychiatry.

[9]  R. Shillcock,et al.  Patients with hemianopic alexia adopt an inefficient eye movement strategy when reading text. , 2006, Brain : a journal of neurology.

[10]  H Herman Bouma,et al.  On the control of eye saccades in reading , 1974 .

[11]  E K Warrington,et al.  Measuring dysgraphia: a graded-difficulty spelling test. , 1994, Behavioural neurology.

[12]  K. Rayner Eye Guidance in Reading: Fixation Locations within Words , 1979, Perception.

[13]  J. Zihl Eye movement patterns in hemianopic dyslexia. , 1995, Brain : a journal of neurology.

[14]  L. Rapport,et al.  Validation of the Warrington theory of visual processing and the Visual Object and Space Perception Battery. , 1998, Journal of clinical and experimental neuropsychology.

[15]  G. Kerkhoff,et al.  Rehabilitation of hemianopic alexia in patients with postgeniculate visual field disorders , 1992 .

[16]  D. Bub,et al.  Pure Alexia: Attempted Rehabilitation and Its Implications for Interpretation of the Deficit , 1994, Brain and Language.

[17]  M Behrmann,et al.  The eye movements of pure alexic patients during reading and nonreading tasks , 2001, Neuropsychologia.

[18]  K. Sundet,et al.  PSYCHOMETRIC PROPERTIES OF A NORWEGIAN RESEARCH VERSION OF THE 'WECHSLER ABBREVIATED SCALE OF INTELLIGENCE' (WASI) , 2001 .

[19]  J. Büttner-Ennever,et al.  Anatomical substrates of oculomotor control , 1997, Current Opinion in Neurobiology.

[20]  Paul Muter,et al.  Reading dynamically displayed text , 1989 .

[21]  Yanning H. Han,et al.  Vertical optokinetic nystagmus and saccades in normal human subjects. , 2003, Investigative ophthalmology & visual science.

[22]  Michael Wilson MRC Psycholinguistic Database , 2001 .

[23]  C. Scudder,et al.  The microscopic anatomy and physiology of the mammalian saccadic system , 1996, Progress in Neurobiology.