Pupillary responses in normal subjects following auditory stimulation
Author(s) -
Takuro Hirano,
Hiroaki Inoue,
Takuya Uemura,
Kuriko Matsunaga
Publication year - 1994
Publication title -
european archives of oto-rhino-laryngology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.849
H-Index - 71
eISSN - 1434-4726
pISSN - 0937-4477
DOI - 10.1007/bf02565210
Subject(s) - medicine , guanethidine , pupillary reflex , pupillary response , pupil , stimulation , audiology , orienting response , anesthesia , reflex , psychology , neuroscience , habituation
To clarify pupillary responses of humans following auditory stimuli, we studied both eyes of 61 normal subjects using a computed pupillograph. Unilateral auditory stimulation elicited pupillary dilatation in all cases. Pupillary responses were classified according to duration as being either "long" or "short". The duration of dilatation was 1530 +/- 320 ms (mean +/- SD) in the long-lasting group (n = 45) and 850 +/- 250 ms in the short-lasting group (n = 16). The latency time for dilatation was 460 +/- 80 ms. Both eyes of each subject showed the same response. Two drops of 10% guanethidine, a sympathetic blocking agent, were applied to one eye of 3 subjects. Although the early phase of dilatation was barely affected, the late phase was inhibited, as seen in long-lasting dilatation. The short-lasting response was unaffected. We conclude that the long-lasting response consists of an early pupillary dilatation due to inhibition of parasympathetic nervous activity and a late dilatation due to excitation of sympathetic activity. The short-lasting response is produced only by inhibition of the parasympathetic component.
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