Buckingham R A
Department of Otolaryngology, Head and Neck Surgery, University of Illinois at Chicago, College of Medicine, USA.
Laryngoscope. 1999 May;109(5):717-22. doi: 10.1097/00005537-199905000-00008.
To determine if there is an anatomic basis for the assumption that loose, "rogue" otoliths presumed to arise from the utricular macula and theorized to cause benign paroxysmal positional vertigo (BPPV) by impinging on semicircular canal ampullae could be returned to their original site by a series of changes in the position of the head called particle repositioning maneuvers (PRMs). Further, if such otolith movement were possible, once they were replaced into the utricle, would they adhere to the utricular macula?
Kodachrome photographs of 2-mm-thick macrosections of human temporal bones were available for evaluation. The bones were sectioned in horizontal, coronal, and sagittal planes. Rice grains were placed on the photographs of the cross-sections to demonstrate the possible paths taken by loose otoliths under the influence of gravity in different positions of the head.
A study of cross-sections of the temporal bone shows that loose macular otoliths after PRMs would tend to fall into the lumen of the utricle. Once the patient assumes the erect position, however, repositioned otoliths would tend to fall into the near or utriculopetal side of the cupula of the posterior semicircular canal, which opens directly into the inferior portion of the utricle, and could cause labyrinth stimulation and BPPV by the same mechanism of misplaced otoliths on the opposite or far side of the cupula. Loose otoliths in the utricle could also stimulate the horizontal ampullae.
PRMs do not remove or fix otoliths in any specific site in the labyrinth. Repositioning of loose otoliths onto the original site in the macula of the utricle, which lies superiorly in the vestibule, could not be accomplished by any of the repositioning maneuvers. If otoliths were to be repositioned on the utricular macula, there is no evidence that the otoliths would adhere to the macula when the patient assumes the erect position. The good results obtained by physiotherapeutic procedures suggest that some other mechanism than repositioning of otoliths is responsible for the relief of BPPV.
确定是否存在解剖学依据支持以下假设,即假定源自椭圆囊斑的松散“游离”耳石,理论上通过撞击半规管壶腹导致良性阵发性位置性眩晕(BPPV),能否通过一系列称为颗粒复位手法(PRM)的头部位置变化使其回到原来位置。此外,如果这种耳石移动是可能的,一旦它们被放回椭圆囊,它们会附着在椭圆囊斑上吗?
有可供评估的2毫米厚人类颞骨宏观切片的柯达彩色照片。这些骨头在水平、冠状和矢状平面上进行切片。将米粒放在横截面照片上,以展示游离耳石在头部不同位置受重力影响可能采取的路径。
对颞骨横截面的研究表明,PRM后松散的斑状耳石往往会落入椭圆囊腔。然而,一旦患者处于直立位置,重新定位的耳石往往会落入后半规管壶腹靠近或向椭圆囊侧,后半规管壶腹直接通向椭圆囊下部,并且可能通过与壶腹另一侧或远侧耳石位置不当相同的机制引起迷路刺激和BPPV。椭圆囊中的游离耳石也可能刺激水平壶腹。
PRM不能将耳石移除或固定在迷路中的任何特定位置。无法通过任何复位手法将松散的耳石重新定位到位于前庭上方的椭圆囊斑的原始位置。如果耳石要重新定位到椭圆囊斑上,没有证据表明当患者处于直立位置时耳石会附着在斑上。物理治疗程序取得的良好效果表明,除了耳石复位之外,还有其他一些机制导致BPPV缓解。