German Center for Vertigo and Balance Disorders, University of Munich, Munich, Germany.
Department of Neurology, University of Munich, Munich, Germany.
J Neurol. 2018 Oct;265(Suppl 1):57-62. doi: 10.1007/s00415-018-8814-y. Epub 2018 Mar 5.
To examine the mechanism underlying previously reported ameliorating effects of noisy galvanic vestibular stimulation (GVS) on balance performance in patients with bilateral vestibulopathy (BVP) and determine those patients (incomplete versus complete vestibular loss) that might benefit from this intervention.
Vestibulospinal reflex thresholds were determined in 12 patients with BVP [2 with complete loss (cBVP) and 10 with residual function (rBVP)]. Patients were stimulated with 1 Hz sinusoidal GVS of increasing amplitudes (0-1.9 mA). Coherence between GVS input and stimulation-induced body motion was determined and psychometric function fits were subsequently used to determine individual vestibulospinal reflex thresholds. The procedure was repeated with an additional application of imperceptible white noise GVS (nGVS).
All patients with rBVP but none with cBVP exhibited stimulation-induced vestibulospinal reflex responses with a mean threshold level of 1.26 ± 0.08 mA. Additional nGVS resulted in improved processing of weak subthreshold vestibular stimuli (p = 0.015) and thereby effectively decreased the vestibulospinal threshold in 90% of patients with rBVP (mean reduction 17.3 ± 3.9%; p < 0.001).
The present findings allow to identify the mechanism by which nGVS appears to stabilize stance and gait performance in patients with BVP. Accordingly, nGVS effectively lowers the vestibular threshold to elicit balance-related reflexes that are required to adequately regulate postural equilibrium. This intervention is only effective in the presence of a residual vestibular functionality, which, however, applies for the majority of patients with BVP. Low-intensity noise stimulation thereby provides a non-invasive treatment option to optimize residual vestibular resources in BVP.
探究先前报道的嘈杂电前庭刺激(GVS)改善双侧前庭病(BVP)患者平衡性能的机制,并确定哪些患者(不完全前庭损失与完全前庭损失)可能受益于这种干预。
在 12 名 BVP 患者中确定前庭脊髓反射阈值[2 名完全损失(cBVP)和 10 名有残余功能(rBVP)]。患者接受 1 Hz 正弦 GVS 刺激,强度逐渐增加(0-1.9 mA)。确定 GVS 输入与刺激诱导的身体运动之间的相干性,随后使用心理物理函数拟合来确定个体前庭脊髓反射阈值。在施加可察觉的白噪声 GVS(nGVS)后重复该程序。
所有 rBVP 患者均表现出刺激诱导的前庭脊髓反射反应,平均阈值水平为 1.26±0.08 mA,而 cBVP 患者则没有。额外的 nGVS 改善了对弱亚阈值前庭刺激的处理(p=0.015),从而有效降低了 90%rBVP 患者的前庭脊髓阈值(平均降低 17.3±3.9%;p<0.001)。
本研究结果能够确定 nGVS 似乎稳定 BVP 患者站立和步态性能的机制。相应地,nGVS 有效地降低了引发与平衡相关反射的前庭阈值,这些反射对于充分调节姿势平衡是必需的。这种干预仅在存在残余前庭功能的情况下有效,而这适用于大多数 BVP 患者。低强度噪声刺激为优化 BVP 中的残余前庭资源提供了一种非侵入性治疗选择。