Robertson D D, Dort J C, Ireland D J
University of Manitoba Faculty of Medicine, Winnipeg.
J Otolaryngol. 1994 Aug;23(4):263-8.
After acute loss of peripheral vestibular function, a centrally adaptive process takes place. Clinical measurements of vestibular adaptation are useful, both diagnostically and as a means of following patients after acute vestibular deficits. Ocular torsion is one measurement that can be used to follow these acutely disabled patients. The measurement is made from fundus photographs and is technically easy to perform and interpret. We present a pilot study from our Vestibular Disorders Clinic using fundus photography to measure the optic nerve head-foveal angle in six patients undergoing unilateral vestibular neurectomy, with subsequent analysis resulting in a speculative mathematical model of vestibular compensation in the roll plane. While the identification or selection of patients with significant ocular torsions from the vestibular population remains ill-defined, fundus photography remains an easy and useful method of following compensation in postoperative patients.