Balance and Vision Laboratory, Neuroscience Research Australia, Cnr Barker Street & Easy Street, Randwick New South Wales, 2031, Australia.
J Assoc Res Otolaryngol. 2013 Feb;14(1):29-36. doi: 10.1007/s10162-012-0359-7. Epub 2012 Nov 21.
A recent study showed that the angular vestibulo-ocular reflex (VOR) can be better adaptively increased using an incremental retinal image velocity error signal compared with a conventional constant large velocity-gain demand (×2). This finding has important implications for vestibular rehabilitation that seeks to improve the VOR response after injury. However, a large portion of vestibular patients have unilateral vestibular hypofunction, and training that raises their VOR response during rotations to both the ipsilesional and contralesional side is not usually ideal. We sought to determine if the vestibular response to one side could selectively be increased without affecting the contralateral response. We tested nine subjects with normal vestibular function. Using the scleral search coil and head impulse techniques, we measured the active and passive VOR gain (eye velocity / head velocity) before and after unilateral incremental VOR adaptation training, consisting of self-generated (active) head impulses, which lasted ≈ 15 min. The head impulses consisted of rapid, horizontal head rotations with peak-amplitude 15°, peak-velocity 150°/s and peak-acceleration 3,000°/s(2). The VOR gain towards the adapting side increased after training from 0.92 ± 0.18 to 1.11 ± 0.22 (+22.7 ± 20.2 %) during active head impulses and from 0.91 ± 0.15 to 1.01 ± 0.17 (+11.3 ± 7.5 %) during passive head impulses. During active impulses, the VOR gain towards the non-adapting side also increased by ≈ 8 %, though this increase was ≈ 70 % less than to the adapting side. A similar increase did not occur during passive impulses. This study shows that unilateral vestibular adaptation is possible in humans with a normal VOR; unilateral incremental VOR adaptation may have a role in vestibular rehabilitation. The increase in passive VOR gain after active head impulse adaptation suggests that the training effect is robust.
最近的一项研究表明,与传统的大速度增益需求(×2)相比,使用增量视网膜像速度误差信号可以更好地适应性增加角前庭眼反射(VOR)。这一发现对于寻求改善损伤后 VOR 反应的前庭康复具有重要意义。然而,很大一部分前庭患者存在单侧前庭功能低下,并且在向同侧和对侧旋转时提高其 VOR 反应的训练通常并不理想。我们试图确定是否可以选择性地增加一侧的前庭反应而不影响对侧反应。我们测试了 9 名具有正常前庭功能的受试者。使用巩膜搜索线圈和头部脉冲技术,我们在单侧增量 VOR 适应训练前后测量了主动和被动 VOR 增益(眼速/头速),适应训练由自主产生(主动)的头部脉冲组成,持续约 15 分钟。头部脉冲由快速的水平头部旋转组成,峰值幅度为 15°,峰值速度为 150°/s,峰值加速度为 3,000°/s(2)。在主动头部脉冲期间,向适应侧的 VOR 增益从训练前的 0.92±0.18 增加到 1.11±0.22(增加 22.7±20.2%),在被动头部脉冲期间,从 0.91±0.15 增加到 1.01±0.17(增加 11.3±7.5%)。在主动脉冲期间,向非适应侧的 VOR 增益也增加了约 8%,尽管这种增加比适应侧少约 70%。在被动脉冲期间,不会发生类似的增加。本研究表明,在具有正常 VOR 的人中,单侧前庭适应是可能的;单侧增量 VOR 适应可能在前庭康复中发挥作用。在主动头部脉冲适应后被动 VOR 增益增加表明训练效果稳健。