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Abstract
BACKGROUND: The gain (eye-velocity/head-velocity) of the angular vestibuloocular reflex (aVOR) during head impulses can be increased while viewing near-targets and when exposed to unilateral, incremental retinal image velocity error signals. It is not clear however, whether the tonic or phasic vestibular pathways mediate these gain increases.
OBJECTIVE: Determine whether a shared pathway is responsible for gain enhancement between vergence and adaptation of aVOR gain in patients with unilateral vestibular hypofunction (UVH).
MATERIAL AND METHODS: 20 patients with UVH were examined for change in aVOR gain during a vergence task and after 15-minutes of ipsilesional incremental VOR adaptation (uIVA) using StableEyes (a device that controls a laser target as a function of head velocity) during horizontal passive head impulses. A 5 % aVOR gain increase was defined as the threshold for significant change.
RESULTS: 11/20 patients had >5% vergence-mediated gain increase during ipsi-lesional impulses. For uIVA, 10/20 patients had >5% ipsi-lesional gain increase. There was no correlation between the vergence-mediated gain increase and gain increase after uIVA training.
CONCLUSION: Vergence-enhanced and uIVA training gain increases are mediated by separate mechanisms and/or vestibular pathways (tonic/phasic). The ability to increase the aVOR gain during vergence is not prognostic for successful adaptation training.
Originalsprache | Englisch |
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Seiten (von - bis) | 109-117 |
Seitenumfang | 9 |
Fachzeitschrift | Journal of Vestibular Research: Equilibrium and Orientation |
Jahrgang | 31 |
Ausgabenummer | 2 |
DOIs | |
Publikationsstatus | Veröffentlicht - 2021 |
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OCTAVUS: Patophysiologische Untersuchungen des vestibulookulären Reflexes
Büki, B. (PI)
01.07.2020 → 15.04.2024
Projekt: Forschungsimpulse › Forschungsfreiraum (RTO)