Heimbrand S, Bronstein A M, Gresty M A, Faldon M E
MRC Human Movement and Balance Unit, National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery, London, UK.
Exp Brain Res. 1996 Dec;112(3):372-80. doi: 10.1007/BF00227943.
The horizontal cervico-ocular reflex (COR) was examined in five labyrinthine-defictive subjects (LDS), during both passive oscillations of the head on the trunk (HTexam) and of the trunk under the earth-fixed head (THexam) at 0.1-0.5 Hz, peak angular displacement +/- 30 degrees. Subjects were tested in the dark, before and immediately after adaptation to binocular magnifying (x1.9) and reducing (x0.6) lenses. During long-term adaptation, the LDS were exposed to the normal environment for 5 h while wearing lenses. Short-term adaptation experiments (15-20 min) consisted of sustained ocular following of a small LED in an otherwise dark room and in full-room illumination. This LED was either stationary in space whilst the subjects moved their head actively, or fixed on the chair and rotating with the trunk during head-fixed stimulation. In all five patients, magnifying lenses increased COR gain (peak slow-phase eye velocity/peak stimulus velocity), whereas reducing lenses reduced the gain. Under HTexam the gain changes were greater, more consistent and the phases approximately compensatory to head displacement, whereas during THexam the gain decreased and phase increased at higher frequencies. COR adaptation was observed during foveal stimulation alone, but the effects were stronger with added background illumination. Results during an imaginary target task showed that the gain can be influenced strongly by mental set. Our findings indicate a highly modifiable COR in subjects with loss of vestibular function. Both peripheral and foveal retinal information contribute to the plastic changes in COR gain. Somatosensory cues from the trunk as well as cognitive/perceptual factors may be involved in the modification of the COR, by providing information about the relevance of eye movements, and contribute to the stabilisation of gaze in space.
在五名迷路功能缺陷受试者(LDS)中检测了水平颈眼反射(COR),检测时头部在躯干上进行被动摆动(HTexam)以及躯干在固定于地面的头部下方进行被动摆动(THexam),频率为0.1 - 0.5Hz,峰值角位移为±30度。受试者在黑暗中接受测试,分别在适应双眼放大(x1.9)和缩小(x0.6)镜片之前及之后立即进行测试。在长期适应过程中,LDS佩戴镜片在正常环境中暴露5小时。短期适应实验(15 - 20分钟)包括在暗室和全室照明条件下,让受试者持续追踪一个小LED。这个LED要么在空间中静止,受试者主动移动头部;要么固定在椅子上,在头部固定刺激期间随躯干一起旋转。在所有五名患者中,放大镜片增加了COR增益(峰值慢相眼速度/峰值刺激速度),而缩小镜片则降低了增益。在HTexam期间,增益变化更大、更一致,且相位与头部位移大致呈补偿关系,而在THexam期间,增益在较高频率下降低且相位增加。仅在中央凹刺激期间观察到COR适应,但在增加背景照明时效果更强。在想象目标任务中的结果表明,心理定势可强烈影响增益。我们的研究结果表明,前庭功能丧失的受试者中COR具有高度可调节性。外周和中央凹视网膜信息均有助于COR增益的可塑性变化。来自躯干的体感线索以及认知/感知因素可能通过提供有关眼动相关性的信息参与COR的调节,并有助于稳定空间中的注视。