The effects of tobacco smoking on smooth pursuit eye movements

Abstract
It has recently been shown that tobacco smoking in normal human subjects induces a transient primary‐position upbeat nystagmus. We studied the effects of tobacco smoking on smooth pursuit eye movement and found defects in both vertical and horizontal tracking during the first 5 minutes after smoking one cigarette. The smooth pursuit defect consisted of a reduction in upward tracking velocity and the superposition of saccadic square‐wave jerks on both vertical and horizontal tracking eye movements. The degree of impairment in upward smooth pursuit correlated with the intensity of tobacco‐induced nystagmus present when recording in darkness. We suggest that these alterations are due to summation of nystagmus on normal tracking eye movements rather than primary defects in the smooth pursuit system.

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