Crane B T, Demer J L
Department of Ophthalmology, University of California, Los Angeles 90095-7002, USA.
J Neurophysiol. 1998 Sep;80(3):1151-66. doi: 10.1152/jn.1998.80.3.1151.
The vestibulo-ocular reflex (VOR) generates compensatory eye movements in response to angular and linear acceleration sensed by semicircular canals and otoliths respectively. Gaze stabilization demands that responses to linear acceleration be adjusted for viewing distance. This study in humans determined the transient dynamics of VOR initiation during angular and linear acceleration, modification of the VOR by viewing distance, and the effect of unilateral deafferentation. Combinations of unpredictable transient angular and linear head rotation were created by whole body yaw rotation about eccentric axes: 10 cm anterior to eyes, centered between eyes, centered between otoliths, and 20 cm posterior to eyes. Subjects viewed a target 500, 30, or 15 cm away that was extinguished immediately before rotation. There were four stimulus intensities up to a maximum peak acceleration of 2,800 degrees/s2. The normal initial VOR response began 7-10 ms after onset of head rotation. Response gain (eye velocity/head velocity) for near as compared with distant targets was increased as early as 1-11 ms after onset of eye movement; this initial effect was independent of linear acceleration. An otolith mediated effect modified VOR gain depending on both linear acceleration and target distance beginning 25-90 ms after onset of head rotation. For rotational axes anterior to the otoliths, VOR gain for the nearest target was initially higher but later became less than that for the far target. There was no gain correction for the physical separation between the eyes and otoliths. With lower acceleration, there was a nonlinear reduction in the early gain increase with close targets although later otolith-mediated effects were not affected. In subjects with unilateral vestibular deafferentation, the initial VOR was quantitatively normal for rotation toward the intact side. When rotating toward the deafferented side, VOR gain remained less than half of normal for at least the initial 55 ms when head acceleration was highest and was not modulated by target distance. After this initial high acceleration period, gain increased to a degree depending on target distance and axis eccentricity. This behavior suggests that the commissural VOR pathways are not modulated by target distance. These results suggest that the VOR is initially driven by short latency ipsilateral target distance dependent and bilateral target-distance independent canal pathways. After 25 ms, otolith inputs contribute to the target distance dependent pathway. The otolith input later grows to eventually dominate the target distance mediated effect. When otolith input is unavailable the target distance mediated canal component persists. Modulation of canal mediated responses by target distance is a nonlinear effect, most evident for high head accelerations.
前庭眼反射(VOR)分别响应半规管和耳石所感知的角加速度和线加速度,产生代偿性眼球运动。凝视稳定要求根据观察距离调整对线加速度的反应。这项针对人类的研究确定了角加速度和线加速度期间VOR起始的瞬态动力学、观察距离对VOR的修正以及单侧传入神经切断的影响。通过绕偏心轴进行全身偏航旋转,产生不可预测的瞬态角向和线性头部旋转的组合:眼睛前方10厘米、两眼之间、耳石之间以及眼睛后方20厘米。受试者观看距离为500、30或15厘米的目标,该目标在旋转前立即熄灭。有四种刺激强度,最大峰值加速度高达2800度/s²。正常的初始VOR反应在头部旋转开始后7 - 10毫秒开始。与远处目标相比,近距离目标的反应增益(眼球速度/头部速度)在眼球运动开始后1 - 11毫秒就开始增加;这种初始效应与线加速度无关。耳石介导的效应从头部旋转开始后25 - 90毫秒起,根据线加速度和目标距离修改VOR增益。对于耳石前方的旋转轴,最近目标的VOR增益最初较高,但后来变得低于远处目标的增益。对于眼睛和耳石之间的物理距离没有增益校正。在较低加速度下,近距离目标早期增益增加存在非线性降低,尽管后期耳石介导的效应不受影响。在单侧前庭传入神经切断的受试者中,向完整侧旋转时初始VOR在数量上是正常的。当向传入神经切断侧旋转时,在头部加速度最高的至少最初55毫秒内,VOR增益保持在正常的一半以下,并且不受目标距离的调节。在这个初始高加速度期之后,增益根据目标距离和轴偏心度有所增加。这种行为表明连合VOR通路不受目标距离的调节。这些结果表明,VOR最初由短潜伏期的同侧目标距离依赖性和双侧目标距离非依赖性的半规管通路驱动。25毫秒后,耳石输入对目标距离依赖性通路有贡献。耳石输入后来逐渐增强,最终主导目标距离介导的效应。当耳石输入不可用时,目标距离介导的半规管成分持续存在。目标距离对半规管介导反应的调节是一种非线性效应,在高头部加速度时最为明显。