MacDougall H G, Brizuela A E, Burgess A M, Curthoys I S, Halmagyi G M
School of Psychology, University of Sydney, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.
Otol Neurotol. 2005 May;26(3):500-11. doi: 10.1097/01.mao.0000169766.08421.ef.
That disease or dysfunction of vestibular end organs in human patients will reduce or eliminate the contribution of the affected end organs to the total eye-movement response to DC surface galvanic vestibular stimulation (GVS).
It was assumed that DC GVS (at current of 5 mA) stimulates all vestibular end organs, an assumption that is strongly supported by physiological evidence, including the activation of primary vestibular afferent neurons by galvanic stimulation. Previous studies also have described the oculomotor responses to vestibular activation. Stimulation of individual semicircular canals results in eye movements parallel to the plane of the stimulated canal, and stimulation of the utricular macula produces changes in ocular torsional position. It was also assumed that the total three-dimensional eye-movement response to GVS is the sum of the contributions of the oculomotor drive of all the vestibular end organs. If a particular vestibular end organ were to be diseased or dysfunctional, it was reasoned that its contribution to the GVS-induced oculomotor response would be reduced or absent and that patients thus affected would have a systematic difference in their GVS-induced oculomotor response compared with the response of normal healthy individuals.
Three-dimensional video eye-movement recording was carried out in complete darkness on normal healthy subjects and patients with various types of vestibular dysfunction, as diagnosed by independent vestibular clinical tests. The eye-movement response to long-duration bilateral and unilateral surface GVS was measured.
The pattern of horizontal, vertical, and torsional eye velocity and eye position during GVS of patients independently diagnosed with bilateral vestibular dysfunction, unilateral vestibular dysfunction, CHARGE syndrome (semicircular canal hypoplasia), semicircular canal occlusion, or inferior vestibular neuritis differed systematically from the responses of normal healthy subjects in ways that corresponded to the expectations from the conceptual approach of the study.
The study reports the first data on the differences between the normal response to GVS and those of patients with a number of clinical vestibular conditions including unilateral vestibular loss, canal block, and vestibular neuritis. The GVS-induced eye-movement patterns of patients with vestibular dysfunction are consistent with the reduction or absence of oculomotor contribution from the end organs implicated in their particular disease condition.
人类患者前庭终器的疾病或功能障碍将减少或消除受影响终器对直流表面电刺激前庭刺激(GVS)引起的总眼球运动反应的贡献。
假定直流GVS(电流为5 mA)刺激所有前庭终器,这一假设得到了生理学证据的有力支持,包括电刺激激活初级前庭传入神经元。先前的研究也描述了对前庭激活的动眼反应。刺激单个半规管会导致眼球运动与受刺激半规管的平面平行,刺激椭圆囊斑会导致眼球扭转位置发生变化。还假定对GVS的三维眼球运动反应是所有前庭终器动眼驱动贡献的总和。如果某个特定的前庭终器患病或功能失调,据推测其对GVS诱导的动眼反应的贡献将减少或消失,因此受影响的患者与正常健康个体相比,其GVS诱导的动眼反应会有系统性差异。
在完全黑暗的环境中,对正常健康受试者和经独立前庭临床测试诊断为患有各种类型前庭功能障碍的患者进行三维视频眼动记录。测量对长时间双侧和单侧表面GVS的眼动反应。
经独立诊断患有双侧前庭功能障碍、单侧前庭功能障碍、CHARGE综合征(半规管发育不全)、半规管阻塞或下前庭神经炎的患者,在GVS期间的水平、垂直和扭转眼速度及眼位模式与正常健康受试者的反应有系统性差异,这些差异与该研究概念方法的预期相符。
该研究报告了关于对GVS的正常反应与包括单侧前庭丧失、半规管阻塞和前庭神经炎在内的多种临床前庭疾病患者反应之间差异的首批数据。前庭功能障碍患者的GVS诱导眼动模式与特定疾病状态所涉及的终器动眼贡献减少或缺失一致。