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with normal pupillary function. Space occupying lesions of the brain frequently produce such central blindness (amblyopia) by interfering with the optic radiations or visual cortex. However, with a large forebrain mass on one side, possibly resulting in contralateral central blindness with normal pupils, the optic nerve may secondarily become compressed on the ipsilateral (to the lesion) side resulting in ipsilateral peripheral blindness. Similarly, secondary compression of the oculomotor nerve under the midbrain can cause additional mydriasis ipsilateral to such a mass lesion.

      Animals with various diffuse cerebellar diseases have been observed to have bilaterally deficient menace responses. These animals are not blind, do not have facial paralysis that would explain the menace deficit, and they pull their head away from the menacing gesture, thus demonstrating degrees of amblyopia. It has been assumed that in large animals the pathway for the menace response passes from the occipital cortex contralateral to the visual threat, back across the midline and through the ipsilateral cerebellum, before targeting the facial nucleus ipsilateral to the visual stimulus. It is perhaps as likely that the cerebellum exerts both stimulatory and inhibitory influences on many cerebral functions, including visual responses.17 Cerebellar disease may well thus interfere with such modulating influences, thereby effecting an altered, suppressed, menace response. Foals and calves appear to be able to see by a few hours of age but do not blink in response to a menacing gesture until several days to 2 weeks of age.18 They do blink in response to a dazzling bright light and pull their heads away from a strong menacing gesture, often in a jerky manner. These normal findings in the neonatal period are reminiscent of those found with cerebellar disease in more mature animals.

       Oculomotor nerve—CN III (parasympathetic)

Schematic illustration of pupillary light pathway. Schematic illustration of ocular sympathetic pathway. Schematic illustration of visual and light pathways.

      Because the observation of pupillary light responses in both eyes simultaneously is awkward to perform alone in large animals, the swinging light test is a useful alternative. The use of this test essentially removes the need to do consensual pupillary light reflex testing. The swinging light test is performed as follows. A bright focused source of light is shone into one eye, and after pupillary constriction is completed, the light is quickly transferred to the opposite eye in which further pupillary constriction is expected to occur if the eye is normal. This test is then performed in reverse and repeated with swinging movements of the light source, starting at say 30 cm from the eyes and moving step‐wise closer to say 5 cm from the eyeball. It is best to perform this test in dim light, and in performing the test in this manner the patient becomes accustomed to the swinging bright light so that it does not blink with a dazzle response when the light reaches the retina, which often obscures the initial fast pupillary response. If the pupil dilates when the light reaches the second eye in this test, there must be an afferent optic lesion involving that second eye.

      These pupillary light reflexes are within the brainstem and thus are not affected by lesions involving the cerebral visual cortex (Figure 2.9). A widely dilated, mydriatic pupil in an eye that has normal vision suggests an oculomotor nerve lesion; the pupil being unresponsive to light directed into either eye. The pupil in the contralateral eye, with normal oculomotor function, responds to light directed into both the ipsilateral eye (direct response) and the contralateral eye (consensual response). The oculomotor nerves are subject to damage following diffuse brain swelling and from space‐occupying lesions in the forebrain. Both processes can cause pressure to be exerted ventrally onto the brainstem and these nerves can be damaged as they lay between the midbrain and the basilar bones. With asymmetric swelling of cerebral tissue, greater pressure may be applied to one oculomotor nerve resulting in unequal pupils or anisocoria, which is usually evident as ipsilateral pupillary dilation. A severe brainstem contusion can produce various pupillary abnormalities in association with coma or semicoma, and these can change rapidly in the first few hours following injury. Progressive, bilateral, pupillary dilation following cranial injury warrants a grave prognosis.

      When reporting results of pupillary function and light responses, it removes considerable confusion to describe what happens to each pupil when light is shone in each eye in turn and not to use the terms direct and consensual or indirect responses. Thus, with a left‐sided retrobulbar abscess involving left CN III parasympathetic fibers or ciliary

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