Otolaryngology - Head and Neck Surgery, The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center, Columbus, Ohio.
School of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio.
J Neurophysiol. 2022 Oct 1;128(4):934-945. doi: 10.1152/jn.00220.2022. Epub 2022 Sep 7.
Individuals with peripheral or central vestibular dysfunction recruit compensatory saccades (CSs) in response to high acceleration, yaw head impulses. Although CSs have been shown to be an effective strategy for reducing gaze position error (GPE) in individuals with peripheral hypofunction, for individuals with central vestibular dysfunction, the effectiveness of CS is unknown. The purpose of our study was to compare the effectiveness of CS, defined as the ability to compensate for head velocity and eye position errors, between persons with central and peripheral vestibular dysfunction. We compared oculomotor responses during video head impulse testing between individuals with unilateral peripheral vestibular deafferentation, a disorder of the peripheral vestibular afferents, and individuals with multiple sclerosis, a condition affecting the central vestibular pathways. We hypothesized that relative to individuals with peripheral lesions, individuals with central dysfunction would recruit CSs that were delayed and inappropriately scaled to head velocity and GPE. We show that CSs recruited by persons with central vestibular pathology were not uniformly deficient but instead were of a sufficient velocity to compensate for reductions in VOR gain. Compared to those with peripheral vestibular lesions, individuals with central pathology also recruited earlier covert CS with amplitudes that were better corrected for GPE. Conversely, those with central lesions showed greater variability in the amplitude of overt CS relative to GPE. These data point to a unique role for peripheral and central vestibular inputs in the recruitment of CS and suggest that covert CSs are an effective oculomotor strategy for individuals with multiple sclerosis. Compensatory saccades (CSs) are recruited by individuals with unilateral vestibular deafferentation (UVD) to compensate for an impaired vestibulo-ocular reflex (VOR). The effectiveness of CS in multiple sclerosis (MS), a central vestibular impairment, is unknown. We show that in UVD and in MS, covert CSs compensate for reduced VOR gain and minimize gaze position error (GPE), yet in >50% of individuals with MS, overt CS worsened GPE, suggesting unique roles for peripheral and central vestibular inputs.
个体在受到高加速度、偏航性头部脉冲刺激时,会出现外周或中枢前庭功能障碍,进而出现代偿性扫视(CSs)。虽然 CSs 已被证明是一种有效策略,可减少外周功能低下个体的凝视位置误差(GPE),但对于中枢前庭功能障碍的个体,CSs 的有效性尚不清楚。本研究旨在比较外周和中枢前庭功能障碍个体 CSs 的有效性,CSs 是指补偿头部速度和眼位误差的能力。我们比较了单侧外周前庭去传入(一种外周前庭传入的疾病)患者和多发性硬化症(一种影响中枢前庭通路的疾病)患者在视频头脉冲测试期间的眼动反应。我们假设,与外周病变患者相比,中枢功能障碍患者会募集延迟且不适当地与头部速度和 GPE 成比例的 CSs。我们发现,中枢前庭病变患者募集的 CSs 并非普遍不足,而是具有足够的速度来补偿 VOR 增益的降低。与外周前庭病变患者相比,中枢病变患者还更早地募集了对 GPE 具有更好校正作用的隐蔽性 CSs。相反,中枢病变患者的显性 CSs 幅度相对于 GPE 的变异性更大。这些数据表明,外周和中枢前庭输入在 CSs 的募集中具有独特的作用,并表明隐蔽性 CSs 是多发性硬化症患者的一种有效的眼动策略。代偿性扫视(CSs)是由单侧前庭去传入(UVD)个体募集的,以补偿受损的前庭眼反射(VOR)。CS 在多发性硬化症(MS)中的有效性,即中枢性前庭障碍,尚不清楚。我们发现,在 UVD 和 MS 中,隐蔽性 CS 补偿了降低的 VOR 增益,并使凝视位置误差(GPE)最小化,但在超过 50%的 MS 患者中,显性 CS 恶化了 GPE,这表明外周和中枢前庭输入具有独特的作用。