Rassaian Nayer, Sadeghi Navid G, Sabetazad Bardia, McNerney Kathleen M, Burkard Robert F, Sadeghi Soroush G
Department of Physiology, Shahid Beheshti University of Medical Sciences and Health Services.
Audiology and Dizziness Center, Dey General Hospital.
J Vis Exp. 2019 Aug 30(150). doi: 10.3791/60053.
The vestibular system provides information about head movement and mediates reflexes that contribute to balance control and gaze stabilization during daily activities. Vestibular sensors are located in the inner ear on both sides of the head and project to the vestibular nuclei in the brainstem. Vestibular dysfunction is often due to an asymmetry between input from the two sides. This results in asymmetrical neural inputs from the two ears, which can produce an illusion of rotation, manifested as vertigo. The vestibular system has an impressive capacity for compensation, which serves to rebalance how asymmetrical information from the sensory end organs on both sides is processed at the central level. To promote compensation, various rehabilitation programs are used in the clinic; however, they primarily use exercises that improve multisensory integration. Recently, visual-vestibular training has also been used to improve the vestibulo-ocular reflex (VOR) in animals with compensated unilateral lesions. Here, a new method is introduced for rebalancing the vestibular activity on both sides in human subjects. This method consists of five unidirectional rotations in the dark (peak velocity of 320°/s) toward the weaker side. The efficacy of this method was shown in a sequential, double-blinded clinical trial in 16 patients with VOR asymmetry (measured by the directional preponderance in response to sinusoidal rotations). In most cases, VOR asymmetry decreased after a single session, reached normal values within the first two sessions in one week, and the effects lasted up to 6 weeks. The rebalancing effect is due to both an increase in VOR response from the weaker side and a decrease in response from the stronger side. The findings suggest that unidirectional rotation can be used as a supervised rehabilitation method to reduce VOR asymmetry in patients with longstanding vestibular dysfunction.
前庭系统提供有关头部运动的信息,并介导有助于日常活动中平衡控制和注视稳定的反射。前庭传感器位于头部两侧的内耳中,并投射到脑干中的前庭核。前庭功能障碍通常是由于两侧输入的不对称所致。这会导致来自两只耳朵的神经输入不对称,从而产生旋转错觉,表现为眩晕。前庭系统具有令人印象深刻的补偿能力,可在中枢水平重新平衡来自两侧感觉终器的不对称信息的处理方式。为促进补偿,临床上使用了各种康复方案;然而,它们主要使用改善多感觉整合的练习。最近,视觉-前庭训练也被用于改善患有代偿性单侧病变动物的前庭眼反射(VOR)。在此,介绍一种用于重新平衡人类受试者两侧前庭活动的新方法。该方法包括在黑暗中朝着较弱一侧进行五次单向旋转(峰值速度为320°/秒)。在一项针对16名VOR不对称患者(通过对正弦旋转的方向优势来测量)的序贯双盲临床试验中,证明了该方法的有效性。在大多数情况下,单次训练后VOR不对称性降低,在一周内的前两次训练中达到正常值,且效果持续长达6周。这种重新平衡的效果是由于较弱一侧的VOR反应增加以及较强一侧的反应减少所致。这些发现表明,单向旋转可作为一种有监督的康复方法,用于减少长期前庭功能障碍患者的VOR不对称性。