Hering's Law, Sherrington's Law, Spread of Comitance

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Identifier Herings_law_Sherringtons_law_Spread_of_Comitance
Title Hering's Law, Sherrington's Law, Spread of Comitance
Creator Andrew G. Lee, MD; Christopher Nguyen
Affiliation (AGL) Chairman, Department of Ophthalmology, The Methodist Hospital, Houston, Texas; Professor of Ophthalmology, Weill Cornell Medicine, New York City, New York; (CN) Class of 2021, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas
Subject Physiology; Pathology
Description Dr. Lee lectures medical students on Hering's Law and other subjects.
Transcript We're going to talk about Hering's law of equal innervation. So when you have your eye movements, you want to have both eyes look at the target at the same time, and with the same velocity encoding information so that both eyes can get to the target at the same time, so we don't have diplopia. So if we're trying to look at this little house here, and want to look over to the left, we want the two eyes to move together, and that means we have to have co-firing the lateral rectus muscle and the medial rectus muscle. These two muscles are connected by a neurogenic yoke - not like egg yolk, but yoke like on oxen. So the two head of ox are connected by a wooden stick called a yoke, so that the two oxen will move together in the same direction at the same speed. So the medial rectus muscle on one side is yoked to the lateral rectus muscle on the left side, and that neurogenic connection - the yoke - and that means that both muscles will receive the same innervation, and that is called Hering's Law of Equal Innervation.; Simultaneous to that, we have to turn off the antagonists. So, in this case, the lateral rectus muscle in this right eye has to be turned off when we fire the medial rectus muscle in the same eye. Otherwise you'll have the eye fighting against itself. So we have to have equal innervation - Herring's law - and we have to have reciprocal disinnervation - reduced innervational effort - and that's called Sherrington's law. So we've reduced the innervation to the antagonist, and we increase the innervation to the agonist so muscles who are yoked muscles. The reason this is important is, sometimes the yoke is what's creating the problem in the misalignment of the two eyes. So for example in this H diagram where we have the motility represented, if you have a right superior oblique palsy (so the superior oblique muscle in this case is decreased), we'll have over action of the superior oblique muscle on the right's antagonist. So its antagonist is the inferior oblique muscle. So the inferior oblique will appear to overact, because the superior oblique muscle is weak, and so when your direct antagonist is weak you will look like you're overacting. And that over-action means that this eye is actually already looking at the target. So when we ask this eye to also look at the target, it'll appear that this left side superior rectus muscle is under acting, because the innovational effort needed to drive the right eye to the target is less than it would have been had the superior oblique not been weak. Because the superior oblique on the right is weak, the right inferior oblique is overacting, it receives less innervation to look at the target, and that is transmitted to its yoke muscle: the superior rectus muscle on the left side. In order to remove this disparity, and resolve that this is a pseudo paresis, we're gonna block this right eye. And when we block, it we can't see the target anymore, and this under acting superior rectus muscle on the left will now move up and be able to see the target, proving that the left superior rectus muscle under action was from Hering's law. And there's nothing wrong with that left superior rectus muscle: that is a pseudo paresis: ("pseudo-" means false). So it just appears to under act because it's yoke muscle is overacting, its yoke muscle is overacting because its antagonist muscle is under acting. And over time what that means is, the deviation will spread around, because each muscle will now transmit by Hering's law to the other muscles and that will cause the deviation to become comitant over time. Comitant means the same in all directions. So over time, a long standing deviation will be the same in all positions of gaze, because under acting muscle leads to over action of its antagonist, leads the under action of its yoke muscle, and round and round we go until the whole deviation becomes comitant over time. So many deviations come to us and are long-standing and comitant because of Hering's Law.
Date 2019-03
Language eng
Format video/mp4
Type Image/MovingImage
Collection Neuro-Ophthalmology Virtual Education Library: Andrew G. Lee Collection: https://novel.utah.edu/Lee/
Publisher North American Neuro-Ophthalmology Society
Holding Institution Spencer S. Eccles Health Sciences Library, University of Utah, 10 N 1900 E SLC, UT 84112-5890
Rights Management Copyright 2019. For further information regarding the rights to this collection, please visit: https://NOVEL.utah.edu/about/copyright
ARK ark:/87278/s6sf786s
Setname ehsl_novel_lee
ID 1403714
Reference URL https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s6sf786s
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