Guest guest Posted December 2, 2008 Report Share Posted December 2, 2008 Issues of convergence are primarily a lesion of the 4th cranial nerve, the Trochlear Nerve, which activates the medial rectus muscle and originates from the contralateral Pons. You mention that there is lack of convergence and excessive convergence. I assume that this means one eye does not converge well and the other converges too much or too rapidly. This would strike me as a cerebellar issue. You could check some basic cerebellar functions (increased or decreased postural sway with eyes closed, they will fall to their cerebellar lesion, eyes closed finger-to-nose test, watch for inaccuracy, stopping short and hitting the nose too hard [hypometria and hypermetria respectively]) to identify a cerebellar lesion and then have them work with a Chiropractic neurologist, occupational therapist, or physical therapist for tools to address a cerebellar deficit. I am not aware of any way to target the cerebellum with NFB but would love to hear about it if anyone knows a way to do so. As far as general eye movements, the parietal lobe drives pursuits (slowly following a moving object or moving the eyes L to R with reading), the frontal lobe initiates a saccade (quickly drawing the eye to a particular target such as going to the beginning of the next line of text) and the opposite cerebellum stops the saccade at the exact right spot. So, to read, the L parietal lobe pushes the eyes to the R and the L frontal lobe pulls them back to the L and the R cerebellum stops the eyes in exactly the right spot. Ascertaining more specifically what his or her eye tracking problem is can help guide where you might want to train or if you need to refer them to someone that can deal with cerebellar issues more directly. The cerebellum’s biggest source of input is the mechanoreceptors in the spinal joints and the muscle spindles of the postural muscles so Chiropractic care is probably the biggest benefit to a cerebellar problem. Adjusting the spine on the side of the cerebellar deficit only will create some neuroplastic changes in that side of the cerebellum. Pete mentioned in one of his training modules that the Delta rhythm originates from the brainstem. I wonder if there is any type of training of the Delta rhythm that can change brainstem function. Steve Ranicki, DC Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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