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Precision of perceived direction of gravity in partial bilateral vestibulopathy correlates with residual utricular function.
Clin Neurophysiol. 2018 Mar 05;129(5):934-945
Authors: Bürgin A, Bockisch CJ, Tarnutzer AA
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Gait imbalance in patients with bilateral-vestibular-deficiency (BVD) was linked to increased variability in perceived direction of gravity while upright. We hypothesized this to be true also when roll-tilted. Moreover, as utricular input is essential for spatial orientation, we predicted the variability of perceived vertical to correlate inversely with utricular function.
METHODS: Subjective visual vertical (SVV) and haptic vertical (SHV) were measured in various roll-orientations (0°/±45°/±90°) and postural adjustments along earth-vertical/earth-horizontal were collected in patients with partial BVD (n = 10) and healthy controls (n = 11). Patients with bilaterally-absent bone-conducted ocular vestibular-evoked myogenic-potentials (oVEMPs) were compared to those with (partially) preserved oVEMPs.
RESULTS: For the SVV (p < 0.001) and SHV (p = 0.004) variability was larger in patients than controls. Compared to those with (partially) preserved oVEMPs, patients with bilaterally-absent oVEMPs had higher SVV (p = 0.024) and SHV (p = 0.006) variability. Self-positioning along earth-horizontal was more variable in BVD-patients compared to controls (p < 0.001). Again, variability was higher in those with bilaterally-absent oVEMPs (p = 0.032). SVV/SHV-variability was correlated (R2 = 0.61, slope = 1.06 [95%-CI = 0.80-1.54]) in BVD-patients.
CONCLUSION: With variability correlating amongst the different paradigms and with oVEMP-responses, this emphasizes the role of bilaterally intact utricular input for precise perception of gravity.
SIGNIFICANCE: In BVD-patients with bilaterally-absent oVEMPs intensified vestibular rehabilitation should be considered.
PMID: 29550655 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
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