Click here to get the ‘From Primary Cranial Nerve Actions to Functional Synergistic Patterns’ handout
We learn the extraocular muscles one at a time.
Clean. Organized. Easy to memorize.
But here’s the reality: our patients don’t functionally move one muscle at a time.
When your patient looks up, each eye fires both its Superior Rectus AND Inferior Oblique. One wants to rotate the eye inward. The other wants to rotate it outward.
So why isn’t there apparent torsion when we test vertical gaze?
Think of two people pulling a rope in opposite directions with equal force. The rope stays still.
That’s torsional balance. The opposing rotational forces largely cancel each other out, giving us predominantly vertical movement.
This is why the 8-cardinal gaze test works. We’re not just testing individual muscles—we’re assessing synergistic patterns. How well the system coordinates to create functional eye movements.
The clinical implications run deep:
When you see disconjugate gaze, you’re not just seeing “a weak muscle.” You’re seeing a breakdown in a coordinated system that normally functions as a unit.
Understanding this changes how you interpret findings.
Part 2 of 5 in this Visual-Vestibular Foundations series.
This is exactly the kind of foundational thinking we build on in our Certificate of Competency in Vestibular Rehabilitation (CCVR) 3.0 Course — understanding how these synergistic patterns break down in complex, multi-system patients.
And we go deeper into oculomotor assessment and vestibular neurophysiology.
Grab your spot today! Course is filling up quickly.
Next up in this series: How the vestibular system exploits these exact patterns to maintain visual stability during head movements.
By Bridgett Wallace, PT, DPT ~ 360 Neuro Health Co-Founder & Director of Clinical Education