Pleshkov Maksim, Zaitsev Vasilii, Starkov Dmitrii, Demkin Vladimir, Kingma Herman, van de Berg Raymond
Department of Otorhinolaryngology and Head and Neck Surgery, Division of Balance Disorders, Maastricht University Medical Center, School for Mental Health and Neuroscience, Maastricht, Netherlands.
Faculty of Physics, National Research Tomsk State University, Tomsk, Russia.
Front Neurol. 2022 Sep 2;13:917413. doi: 10.3389/fneur.2022.917413. eCollection 2022.
Video head impulse testing is frequently used to evaluate the vestibular function. During this test, eye movement responses are recorded with video-oculography (VOG). However, the use of VOG can sometimes be challenging, especially due to pupil detection problems (e.g., blinking, droopy eyelids, etc.). Therefore, this study investigated whether electro-oculography (EOG), a technique that does not depend on pupil tracking but on the orientation of the corneoretinal potential, might be an alternative to VOG for quantifying eye movement responses during head impulse testing.
Head impulse testing was performed in 19 healthy subjects without a prior history of vestibular symptoms. Horizontal eye movements were recorded simultaneously with EOG (using an EOG system) and VOG (using a VHIT system: ICS Impulse). The eye movement responses to each side of both techniques were compared using a concordance correlation coefficient ( ), -testing, and Bayes Factor (BF) paired -testing.
EOG and VOG obtained eye movement traces that correlated well with each other during head impulse testing (average = 0.89). Average VOR gains obtained with EOG and VOG were not significantly different from each other for all subjects during left head impulses. However, VOG gains differed between both techniques regarding right head impulses. VOG showed significant VOR gain asymmetry (5% to the right), whereas EOG showed no significant asymmetry (1% to the right).
This study demonstrated the use of EOG to record eye movements during head impulse testing for the first time. EOG and VOG obtained eye movement traces that correlated well with each other during horizontal head impulse testing. In addition, EOG showed smaller VOR gain asymmetry in healthy individuals, in contrast to VOG. These findings indicate that EOG might potentially be applicable as an alternative to VOG for collecting eye movement responses during head impulse testing.
10192021-38 dated 19.10.21.
视频头脉冲测试常用于评估前庭功能。在该测试过程中,使用视频眼震图(VOG)记录眼动反应。然而,VOG的使用有时具有挑战性,尤其是由于瞳孔检测问题(如眨眼、眼睑下垂等)。因此,本研究调查了眼电图(EOG),一种不依赖瞳孔追踪而是依赖角膜视网膜电位方向的技术,是否可以替代VOG来量化头脉冲测试期间的眼动反应。
对19名无前庭症状病史的健康受试者进行头脉冲测试。使用EOG系统记录水平眼动,同时使用VOG(使用VHIT系统:ICS Impulse)记录水平眼动。使用一致性相关系数( )、 检验和贝叶斯因子(BF)配对 检验比较两种技术对两侧的眼动反应。
在头脉冲测试期间,EOG和VOG获得的眼动轨迹相互之间相关性良好(平均 = 0.89)。在所有受试者进行左侧头脉冲时,EOG和VOG获得的平均前庭眼反射(VOR)增益彼此之间无显著差异。然而,在右侧头脉冲时,两种技术的VOG增益有所不同。VOG显示出显著的VOR增益不对称(向右5%),而EOG显示无显著不对称(向右1%)。
本研究首次证明了在头脉冲测试期间使用EOG记录眼动。在水平头脉冲测试期间,EOG和VOG获得的眼动轨迹相互之间相关性良好。此外,与VOG相比,EOG在健康个体中显示出较小的VOR增益不对称。这些发现表明,在头脉冲测试期间,EOG可能有潜力作为VOG的替代方法来收集眼动反应。
2021年10月19日的10192021 - 38。