Hood J D, Kayan A
Electroencephalogr Clin Neurophysiol. 1985 Jul;62(4):266-76. doi: 10.1016/0168-5597(85)90004-8.
Repetitive rotational stimuli simulating natural head movements have been applied to the study of the vestibular evoked response in normal subjects and 12 patients with complete loss of vestibular function. Special precautions were taken to eliminate all possible sources of artefacts, in particular, all eye movements were restrained by requiring the subject to fixate upon a target light attached to the rotating chair throughout the course of the test. With a stimulus of 2 sec duration the typical response took the form of a slow negative wave with a mean peak amplitude of approximately 24 microV and maximally recorded from the vertex. It was characteristically absent in the patient group. Occasionally, both in normal subjects and patients it was preceded by a long latency complex thought to be non-vestibular in origin. Tests carried out both in total darkness and in the light show a statistically significant increase in the potential in the latter condition indicating an influence of the optokinetic effect exerted by the visual surround. Further studies have explored the phase changes brought about by varying the amplitude and duration of the stimulus. These have revealed certain parallels in the results of recent animal experimental studies.
模拟自然头部运动的重复性旋转刺激已被应用于对正常受试者和12名前庭功能完全丧失患者的前庭诱发反应的研究。采取了特殊预防措施以消除所有可能的伪迹来源,特别是,通过要求受试者在整个测试过程中注视附着在旋转椅上的目标灯来抑制所有眼球运动。在持续2秒的刺激下,典型反应表现为一个缓慢的负波,平均峰值幅度约为24微伏,最大记录于头顶。在患者组中其特征性缺失。偶尔,在正常受试者和患者中,它之前都有一个潜伏期较长的复合波,被认为起源于非前庭。在完全黑暗和有光条件下进行的测试表明,在后一种情况下电位有统计学上的显著增加,表明视觉环境施加的视动效应的影响。进一步的研究探讨了改变刺激幅度和持续时间所带来的相位变化。这些研究揭示了与近期动物实验研究结果的某些相似之处。