Elidan J, Langhofer L, Honrubia V
Electroencephalogr Clin Neurophysiol. 1987 Jan;68(1):58-69. doi: 10.1016/0168-5597(87)90070-0.
The short-latency vestibular evoked potential (VsEP) induced by angular acceleration impulses (maximal amplitude 30,000 deg/sec2, rise time 2-3 msec) was recorded by skin electrodes in intact cats after various surgical and pharmacological procedures. The normal VsEP consists of 5-8 waves, several microvolts in amplitude, during the first 10 msec. The latency of the first wave (P1) is about 2 msec with respect to the start of head acceleration. The first and the second waves (P1 and P2) were shown to originate from the vestibular nerve and nucleus, respectively. The VsEP disappears permanently after bilateral labyrinthectomy, excision of the 8th nerves, or administration of large doses of gentamicin. Temporary disappearance is caused by anoxia induced for a brief period of time or injection of lidocaine (4%) into the vestibular nerve or into the inner ear after contralateral labyrinthectomy. The VsEPs in the intact cat are similar whether clockwise or counterclockwise stimuli are used and are not affected by changing the position of the head. Unilaterally labyrinthectomized animals, however, show asymmetric response whereby excitatory stimulation of any of the intact semicircular canals evokes prominent P1 and P2 waves which are absent with inhibitory stimulation. The rate and input-output intensity functions of the VsEP are described. The threshold of the VsEP was found to be 1000-1500 deg/sec2. In addition to the neurogenic waves, 2 other potentials appear occasionally in the response: large-amplitude and longer-duration waves with latencies of 8-20 msec, which are of myogenic origin, and smaller waves with shorter latency which probably represent vestibular microphonics and generator potentials. Extracellular recordings of the responses of single second-order neurons in the vestibular nuclei to the same acceleration impulses confirmed that the kinetic vestibular neurons can respond to these stimuli with a latency as short as 3.5 msec. This method for inducing and recording VsEPs has proved to be a powerful tool for the evaluation of vestibular function in experimental animal models.
通过皮肤电极记录完整猫在各种手术和药理学处理后,由角加速度脉冲(最大幅度30,000度/秒²,上升时间2 - 3毫秒)诱发的短潜伏期前庭诱发电位(VsEP)。正常的VsEP在前10毫秒内由5 - 8个波组成,幅度为几微伏。相对于头部加速度开始,第一个波(P1)的潜伏期约为2毫秒。已证明第一个波和第二个波(P1和P2)分别起源于前庭神经和前庭核。双侧迷路切除、切断第8对神经或给予大剂量庆大霉素后,VsEP会永久消失。短暂性消失是由短时间缺氧或在对侧迷路切除后向前庭神经或内耳注射4%利多卡因引起的。无论使用顺时针还是逆时针刺激,完整猫的VsEP相似,且不受头部位置改变的影响。然而,单侧迷路切除的动物表现出不对称反应,即对任何完整半规管的兴奋性刺激会诱发明显的P1和P2波,而抑制性刺激时则无此波。描述了VsEP的频率和输入 - 输出强度函数。发现VsEP的阈值为1000 - 1500度/秒²。除了神经源性波外,反应中偶尔还会出现另外两种电位:潜伏期为8 - 20毫秒的大幅度、持续时间较长的波,其起源于肌源性;以及潜伏期较短的较小波,可能代表前庭微音器电位和发生器电位。前庭核中单个二级神经元对相同加速度脉冲反应的细胞外记录证实,动态前庭神经元对这些刺激的潜伏期可短至3.5毫秒。这种诱发和记录VsEP的方法已被证明是评估实验动物模型前庭功能的有力工具。