Riccelli Roberta, Passamonti Luca, Toschi Nicola, Nigro Salvatore, Chiarella Giuseppe, Petrolo Claudio, Lacquaniti Francesco, Staab Jeffrey P, Indovina Iole
Laboratory of Neuromotor Physiology, IRCCS Santa Lucia Foundation, Rome, Italy.
Centre of Space BioMedicine, University of Rome Tor Vergata, Rome, Italy.
Front Neurol. 2017 Oct 17;8:529. doi: 10.3389/fneur.2017.00529. eCollection 2017.
Persistent postural-perceptual dizziness (PPPD) is a common functional vestibular disorder characterized by persistent symptoms of non-vertiginous dizziness and unsteadiness that are exacerbated by upright posture, self-motion, and exposure to complex or moving visual stimuli. Recent physiologic and neuroimaging data suggest that greater reliance on visual cues for postural control (as opposed to vestibular cues-a phenomenon termed visual dependence) and dysfunction in central visuo-vestibular networks may be important pathophysiologic mechanisms underlying PPPD. Dysfunctions are thought to involve insular regions that encode recognition of the visual effects of motion in the gravitational field.
We tested for altered activity in vestibular and visual cortices during self-motion simulation obtained a visual virtual-reality rollercoaster stimulation using functional magnetic resonance imaging in 15 patients with PPPD and 15 healthy controls (HCs). We compared between groups differences in brain responses to simulated displacements in vertical vs horizontal directions and correlated the difference in directional responses with dizziness handicap in patients with PPPD.
HCs showed increased activity in the anterior bank of the central insular sulcus during vertical relative to horizontal motion, which was not seen in patients with PPPD. However, for the same comparison, dizziness handicap correlated positively with activity in the visual cortex (V1, V2, and V3) in patients with PPPD.
We provide novel insight into the pathophysiologic mechanisms underlying PPPD, including functional alterations in brain processes that affect balance control and reweighting of space-motion inputs to favor visual cues. For patients with PPPD, difficulties using visual data to discern the effects of gravity on self-motion may adversely affect balance control, particularly for individuals who simultaneously rely too heavily on visual stimuli. In addition, increased activity in the visual cortex, which correlated with severity of dizziness handicap, may be a neural correlate of visual dependence.
持续性姿势-感知性头晕(PPPD)是一种常见的功能性前庭疾病,其特征为持续性非眩晕性头晕和不稳症状,这些症状在直立姿势、自我运动以及暴露于复杂或移动视觉刺激时会加重。最近的生理和神经影像学数据表明,在姿势控制方面对视觉线索的更大依赖(与前庭线索相对,这一现象称为视觉依赖)以及中枢视觉-前庭网络功能障碍可能是PPPD潜在的重要病理生理机制。功能障碍被认为涉及岛叶区域,该区域编码对重力场中运动视觉效果的识别。
我们使用功能磁共振成像对15例PPPD患者和15名健康对照者(HCs)进行视觉虚拟现实过山车刺激,以测试自我运动模拟期间前庭和视觉皮层的活动变化。我们比较了两组在垂直和水平方向模拟位移时大脑反应的差异,并将PPPD患者方向反应的差异与头晕障碍进行相关性分析。
与水平运动相比,HCs在垂直运动期间中央岛叶沟前壁的活动增加,而PPPD患者未出现这种情况。然而,对于相同比较,PPPD患者的头晕障碍与视觉皮层(V1、V2和V3)的活动呈正相关。
我们对PPPD潜在的病理生理机制提供了新的见解,包括影响平衡控制的大脑过程中的功能改变以及空间运动输入的重新加权以利于视觉线索。对于PPPD患者,利用视觉数据辨别重力对自我运动影响的困难可能会对平衡控制产生不利影响,特别是对于那些同时过度依赖视觉刺激的个体。此外,视觉皮层活动增加与头晕障碍严重程度相关,可能是视觉依赖的神经关联。