Halmagyi G M, Curthoys I S, Cremer P D, Henderson C J, Todd M J, Staples M J, D'Cruz D M
Neurology Department, Royal Prince Alfred Hospital, NSW, Sydney, Australia.
Exp Brain Res. 1990;81(3):479-90. doi: 10.1007/BF02423496.
The normal horizontal vestibulo-ocular reflex (HVOR) is largely generated by simultaneous stimulation of the two horizontal semicircular canals (HSCCs). To determine the dynamics of the HVOR when it is generated by only one HSCC, compensatory eye movements in response to a novel vestibular stimulus were measured using magnetic search coils. The vestibular stimulus consisted of low-amplitude, high-acceleration, passive, unpredictable, horizontal rotations of the head with respect to the trunk. While these so called head "impuses" had amplitudes of only 15-20 degrees with peak velocities up to 250 deg/s, they had peak accelerations up to 3000 deg/s/s. Fourteen humans were studied in this way before and after therapeutic unilateral vestibular neurectomy; 10 were studied 1 week or 1 year afterwards; 4 were studied 1 week and 1 year afterwards. The results from these 14 patients were compared with the results from 30 normal control subjects and with the results from one subject with absent vestibular function following bilateral vestibular neurectomy. Compensatory eye rotation in normal subjects closely mirrored head rotation. In contrast there was no compensatory eye rotation in the first 170 ms after the onset of head rotation in the subject without vestibular function. Before unilateral vestibular neurectomy all the patients' eye movement responses were within the normal control range. One week after unilateral vestibular neurectomy however there was a asymmetrical bilateral HVOR deficit. The asymmetry was much more profound than has been shown in any previous studies. The HVOR generated in response to head impulses directed away from the intact side largely by ampullofugal disfacilitation from the single intact HSCC (ignoring for the moment the small contribution to the HVOR from stimulation of the vertical SCCs), was severely deficient with an average gain (eye velocity/head velocity) of 0.25 at 122.5 deg/sec head velocity (normal gain = 0.94 +/- 0.08). In contrast the HVOR generated in response to head impulses directed toward the intact side, largely by ampullopetal excitation from the single intact HSCC, was only mildly (but nonetheless significantly) deficient, with an average gain of 0.80 at 122.5 deg/sec head velocity. At these accelerations there was no significant improvement in the average HVOR velocity gain in either direction over the following year. These results indicate that ampullopetal excitation from one HSCC can, even in the absence of ampullofugal disfacilitation from the opposite HSCC, generate a near normal HVOR in response to high-acceleration stimulation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
正常的水平前庭眼反射(HVOR)主要由两个水平半规管(HSCC)同时受到刺激而产生。为了确定仅由一个HSCC产生HVOR时的动力学情况,使用磁搜索线圈测量了对一种新的前庭刺激的代偿性眼动。前庭刺激包括头部相对于躯干的低幅度、高加速度、被动、不可预测的水平旋转。虽然这些所谓的头部“脉冲”幅度仅为15 - 20度,峰值速度高达250度/秒,但它们的峰值加速度高达3000度/秒²。14名人类在治疗性单侧前庭神经切断术前和术后接受了这样的研究;10人在术后1周或1年进行了研究;4人在术后1周和1年进行了研究。将这14名患者的结果与30名正常对照受试者的结果以及一名双侧前庭神经切断术后前庭功能缺失的受试者的结果进行了比较。正常受试者的代偿性眼旋转与头部旋转密切对应。相比之下,在前庭功能缺失的受试者中,头部旋转开始后的最初170毫秒内没有代偿性眼旋转。在单侧前庭神经切断术前,所有患者的眼动反应都在正常对照范围内。然而,单侧前庭神经切断术后1周出现了不对称的双侧HVOR缺陷。这种不对称比以往任何研究中所显示的都要严重得多。由远离完整侧的头部脉冲所引发的HVOR,主要是由单个完整HSCC的壶腹离纤性抑制产生的(暂时忽略垂直半规管刺激对HVOR的微小贡献),严重不足,在头部速度为122.5度/秒时平均增益(眼速度/头部速度)为0.25(正常增益 = 0.94 ± 0.08)。相比之下,由朝向完整侧的头部脉冲所引发的HVOR,主要是由单个完整HSCC的壶腹向纤性兴奋产生的,仅轻度(但仍显著)不足,在头部速度为122.5度/秒时平均增益为0.80。在这些加速度下,在接下来的一年中,两个方向上的平均HVOR速度增益均没有显著改善。这些结果表明,即使在没有来自对侧HSCC的壶腹离纤性抑制的情况下,来自一个HSCC的壶腹向纤性兴奋在对高加速度刺激的反应中也能产生接近正常的HVOR。(摘要截选至400字)