Dai M J, Curthoys I S, Halmagyi G M
Center for Biomedical Engineering, University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia.
Exp Brain Res. 1989;77(2):315-28. doi: 10.1007/BF00274989.
The ability of 33 patients to perceive the direction, relative to the body long axis, of a linear acceleration vector acting in the coronal plane, roll-tilt perception, was studied at various times, before and from 1 week to 6 months after unilateral, selective vestibular neurectomy for Meniere's disease, acoustic neuroma or intractable paroxysmal vertigo. The results of these patients were compared with the results of 31 normal subjects and two control patients who had both vestibular nerves surgically sectioned. Rotating on a fixed-chair centrifuge in an otherwise darkened room, each observer was required to indicate his perception of the direction of the resultant gravito-inertial vector by setting a small, motor-driven, illuminated bar, attached to the chair but rotatable in the fronto-parallel plane, to the perceived gravitational horizontal. Normal subjects accurately align the bar with respect to the gravito-inertial resultant vector which, in the dark, they assume to be the gravitational vertical. This percept has been called the oculogravic illusion. Accurate roll-tilt perception is due to vestibular (probably mainly otolithic) sensory information since patients with bilateral vestibular neurectomies do not perceive the resultant vector accurately. Whereas normal subjects perceive resultant vectors directed to the right and to the left equally accurately, roll-tilt perception was invariably asymmetrical one week after unilateral vestibular neurectomy. Even at rest there was an asymmetry in the baseline settings, so that patients set the bar down on the side of the operated ear, in order for it to appear gravitationally horizontal: if a patient had a right vestibular nerve section then he set the bar clockwise (from the patient's view) below the true gravitational horizontal. With increasing gravito-inertial resultant angles there was an increasing asymmetry of roll-tilt perception due both to decreased sensitivity to roll-tilt stimuli directed towards the operated ear and to transiently increased sensitivity to roll-tilt stimuli directed towards the intact ear. A progressive decrease in both perceptual asymmetries followed, rapidly in the first 3 weeks, more slowly in the next 6 months.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
对33例患者在单侧选择性前庭神经切断术治疗梅尼埃病、听神经瘤或顽固性阵发性眩晕之前以及术后1周~6个月期间的不同时间,研究其感知作用于冠状面的线性加速度矢量相对于身体长轴方向的能力,即翻滚-倾斜感知。将这些患者的结果与31名正常受试者以及两名双侧前庭神经均被手术切断的对照患者的结果进行比较。在其他方面均黑暗的房间里,受试者坐在固定椅式离心机上旋转,要求每位观察者通过将一个小型电动发光杆设置到其感知的重力水平来表明他对合成重力-惯性矢量方向的感知,该发光杆安装在椅子上但可在前平行平面内旋转。正常受试者能将杆相对于重力-惯性合成矢量精确对齐,在黑暗中他们认为该矢量就是重力垂直方向。这种感知被称为眼重力错觉。准确的翻滚-倾斜感知归因于前庭(可能主要是耳石)感觉信息,因为双侧前庭神经切断术患者无法准确感知合成矢量。正常受试者对指向右侧和左侧的合成矢量感知同样准确,而单侧前庭神经切断术后1周,翻滚-倾斜感知总是不对称的。即使在静止状态下,基线设置也存在不对称性,患者会将杆设置在手术耳一侧下方,以便使其看起来处于重力水平:如果患者右侧前庭神经被切断,那么他会将杆顺时针(从患者视角看)设置在真正重力水平以下。随着重力-惯性合成角度增加,翻滚-倾斜感知的不对称性增加,这既是由于对指向手术耳的翻滚-倾斜刺激的敏感性降低,也是由于对指向未受损耳的翻滚-倾斜刺激的敏感性暂时增加。随后,两种感知不对称性逐渐降低,最初3周内迅速降低,接下来6个月内降低得较慢。(摘要截选至400字)