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Title: Static ocular counterroll: video-based analysis after minimizing the false-torsion factors. Author: Hamasaki I, Hasebe S, Ohtsuki H. Journal: Jpn J Ophthalmol; 2005; 49(6):497-504. PubMed ID: 16365796. Abstract: PURPOSE: To determine the validity and usefulness of a newly developed measurement method of static ocular counterrolling (s-OCR) that eliminates false-torsion factors and to test the Jampel hypothesis that s-OCR does not exist. METHODS: A lightweight measurement device, consisting of a video camera, a coaxial light source, and a laser pointer projecting a fixation target on the wall, was fixed to a subject's head by means of a mouthpiece. In 11 healthy adults (mean age: 30 +/- 15 years), digital images of the right eye were captured while the subject kept his head tilted at a randomly selected angle ranging from 0 degrees to 50 degrees . By a frame-by-frame analysis of movements of the corneal light reflex and the iris patterns, OCR was evaluated. RESULTS: Torsional eye movement in the opposite direction to head tilt was found in all subjects. The amount of torsion continuously increased until the head-tilt angle reached 40 degrees. The average (+/- SD) amplitude of a fitted sine curve was 7.6 +/- 3.2 degrees (range: 4.3 degrees-10.3 degrees), and the individual amplitude was significantly larger than the test-retest repeatability of the measurement (+/-1.7 degrees). CONCLUSIONS: The measurement method used in this study provided good test-retest repeatability and ease of application. The characteristics of torsional eye movements that we observed after minimizing the false-torsion factors agree with previous reports supporting the existence of s-OCR.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]