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      Damping of monocular pendular nystagmus with vibration in a patient with multiple sclerosis.

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          Abstract

          Acquired pendular nystagmus (PN) occurs commonly in multiple sclerosis (MS) and results in a highly disabling oscillopsia that impairs vision. It usually consists of pseudo-sinusoidal oscillations at a single frequency (3-5 Hz) that often briefly stop for a few hundred milliseconds after saccades and blinks. The oscillations are thought to arise from instability in the gaze-holding networks ("neural integrator") in the brainstem and cerebellum.(1,2) Here we describe a patient with monocular PN in whom vibration on the skull from a handheld muscle massager strikingly diminished or stopped her nystagmus.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Neurology
          Neurology
          Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
          1526-632X
          0028-3878
          Apr 15 2014
          : 82
          : 15
          Affiliations
          [1 ] From The Johns Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore, MD.
          Article
          WNL.0000000000000324
          10.1212/WNL.0000000000000324
          4001187
          24634455
          3f928c8c-ce7f-46b6-8097-620d3bbb637b
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