April 06, 2021; 96 (14) Resident & Fellow Section
Teaching Video NeuroImages: Atypical Abnormal Eye Movements in PNPO-Related Epilepsy
View ORCID ProfileSara Pavitt, View ORCID ProfileAmanda G. Sandoval Karamian, Gaurav Chattree, Jenna Klotz, View ORCID ProfileShannon Beres
First published September 10, 2020, DOI: https://doi.org/10.1212/WNL.0000000000010861
Sara Pavitt
From Stanford Children's Health (S.P., A.G.S.K., J.K., S.B.) and Stanford Health Care (G.C.), Palo Alto, CA.
Amanda G. Sandoval Karamian
From Stanford Children's Health (S.P., A.G.S.K., J.K., S.B.) and Stanford Health Care (G.C.), Palo Alto, CA.
Gaurav Chattree
From Stanford Children's Health (S.P., A.G.S.K., J.K., S.B.) and Stanford Health Care (G.C.), Palo Alto, CA.
Jenna Klotz
From Stanford Children's Health (S.P., A.G.S.K., J.K., S.B.) and Stanford Health Care (G.C.), Palo Alto, CA.
Shannon Beres
From Stanford Children's Health (S.P., A.G.S.K., J.K., S.B.) and Stanford Health Care (G.C.), Palo Alto, CA.
Teaching Video NeuroImages: Atypical Abnormal Eye Movements in PNPO-Related Epilepsy
Sara Pavitt, Amanda G. Sandoval Karamian, Gaurav Chattree, Jenna Klotz, Shannon Beres
Neurology Apr 2021, 96 (14) e1927; DOI: 10.1212/WNL.0000000000010861
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The patient has 1- to 5-minute-long episodes of erratic saccadic eye movements with associated head jerks, without a correlate on EEG. There is no associated alteration of consciousness or other abnormal movements. The saccade-head movements are in the same direction with a brief interval fixation as if “following a fly,” appearing erratic. Download Supplementary Video 1 via http://dx.doi.org/10.1212/010861_Video_1
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