Digital repository of Slovenian research organisations

Show document
A+ | A- | Help | SLO | ENG

Title:Smooth pursuit and memory saccades are impaired in early-stage Parkinson’s disease patients
Authors:ID Popović, Zvonimir (Author)
ID Gilman Kurić, Tihana (Author)
ID Rajkovača Latić, Ines (Author)
ID Matosa, Sara (Author)
ID Kusic, Luka (Author)
ID De Gobbis, Andrea (Author)
ID Sadikov, Aleksander (Author)
ID Groznik, Vida (Author)
ID Georgiev, Dejan (Author)
ID Tomić, Svetlana (Author)
Files:.pdf PDF - Presentation file, download (1,92 MB)
MD5: E05121BCAF46314018A116948D20B1A4
 
URL URL - Source URL, visit https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/neurology/articles/10.3389/fneur.2025.1702050/full
 
Language:English
Typology:1.01 - Original Scientific Article
Organization:Logo UKC LJ - Ljubljana University Medical Centre
Abstract:Introduction: Parkinson’s disease (PD) is a progressive neurodegenerative disease caused by degeneration of dopaminergic neurons in substantia nigra pars compacta (SNc). One of the most prevalent symptoms is eye movement impairment, presenting in 75% of PD patients, which have fragmented and hypometric smooth pursuit movements with prolonged latency. We aimed to investigate differences in smooth pursuit, reflexive, and memory-guided saccades and antisaccades between patients with early-stage PD and healthy controls.Methods: We conducted a cross-sectional study with idiopathic PD patients in early stage of disease (Hoehn and Yahr stage 0, 1 and 2) and healthy controls. The impairment of smooth pursuit, saccades, antisaccades, and memory-guided saccades was evaluated with eye-tracker analysis using a battery of tests.Results: Forty-two subjects with early-stage idiopathic PD and 50 healthy controls participated in the study. There were no statistically significant differences in age, gender, years of education, or cognition between the groups. Early-stage PD patients showed impairment in velocity, phase, and range of motion of smooth pursuit eye movements, as well as impaired precision and recollection performing visually guided memory saccades. Consequently, there is also a reading dysfunction, with slower reading speed and longer eye fixations. No significant differences were found regarding reflexive saccades and antisaccades between these two groups.Conclusion: Results suggest that impaired smooth pursuit movements, memory-guided saccades and reading functions are present in early-stage PD, even without other expressed motor symptoms. These findings could potentially contribute to the development of new and non-invasive diagnostic biomarkers in PD.
Keywords:biomarkers, early-stage, eye movements, Parkinson's disease, smooth pursuit
Publication status:Published
Publication version:Version of Record
Year of publishing:2026
Number of pages:str. 1-10
Numbering:[article no.] ǂ1702050, Vol. 16
PID:20.500.12556/DiRROS-25670 New window
UDC:616.8
ISSN on article:1664-2295
DOI:10.3389/fneur.2025.1702050 New window
COBISS.SI-ID:266202883 New window
Note:Nasl. z nasl. zaslona; Opis vira z dne 27. 1. 2026;
Publication date in DiRROS:27.01.2026
Views:37
Downloads:20
Metadata:XML DC-XML DC-RDF
:
Copy citation
  
Share:Bookmark and Share


Hover the mouse pointer over a document title to show the abstract or click on the title to get all document metadata.

Record is a part of a journal

Title:Frontiers in Neurology
Publisher:Frontiers Media
ISSN:1664-2295
COBISS.SI-ID:4657727 New window

Licences

License:CC BY 4.0, Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International
Link:http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
Description:This is the standard Creative Commons license that gives others maximum freedom to do what they want with the work as long as they credit the author.

Secondary language

Language:Slovenian
Keywords:biomarkerji, očesni gibi, Parkinsonova bolezen


Back