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Vestibular Perception following Acute Unilateral Vestibular Lesions

Little is known about the vestibulo-perceptual (VP) system, particularly after a unilateral vestibular lesion. We investigated vestibulo-ocular (VO) and VP function in 25 patients with vestibular neuritis (VN) acutely (2 days after onset) and after compensation (recovery phase, 10 weeks). Since the...

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Autores principales: Cousins, Sian, Kaski, Diego, Cutfield, Nicholas, Seemungal, Barry, Golding, John F., Gresty, Michael, Glasauer, Stefan, Bronstein, Adolfo M.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3650015/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23671577
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0061862
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author Cousins, Sian
Kaski, Diego
Cutfield, Nicholas
Seemungal, Barry
Golding, John F.
Gresty, Michael
Glasauer, Stefan
Bronstein, Adolfo M.
author_facet Cousins, Sian
Kaski, Diego
Cutfield, Nicholas
Seemungal, Barry
Golding, John F.
Gresty, Michael
Glasauer, Stefan
Bronstein, Adolfo M.
author_sort Cousins, Sian
collection PubMed
description Little is known about the vestibulo-perceptual (VP) system, particularly after a unilateral vestibular lesion. We investigated vestibulo-ocular (VO) and VP function in 25 patients with vestibular neuritis (VN) acutely (2 days after onset) and after compensation (recovery phase, 10 weeks). Since the effect of VN on reflex and perceptual function may differ at threshold and supra-threshold acceleration levels, we used two stimulus intensities, acceleration steps of 0.5°/s(2) and velocity steps of 90°/s (acceleration 180°/s(2)). We hypothesised that the vestibular lesion or the compensatory processes could dissociate VO and VP function, particularly if the acute vertiginous sensation interferes with the perceptual tasks. Both in acute and recovery phases, VO and VP thresholds increased, particularly during ipsilesional rotations. In signal detection theory this indicates that signals from the healthy and affected side are still fused, but result in asymmetric thresholds due to a lesion-induced bias. The normal pattern whereby VP thresholds are higher than VO thresholds was preserved, indicating that any ‘perceptual noise’ added by the vertigo does not disrupt the cognitive decision-making processes inherent to the perceptual task. Overall, the parallel findings in VO and VP thresholds imply little or no additional cortical processing and suggest that vestibular thresholds essentially reflect the sensitivity of the fused peripheral receptors. In contrast, a significant VO-VP dissociation for supra-threshold stimuli was found. Acutely, time constants and duration of the VO and VP responses were reduced – asymmetrically for VO, as expected, but surprisingly symmetrical for perception. At recovery, VP responses normalised but VO responses remained shortened and asymmetric. Thus, unlike threshold data, supra-threshold responses show considerable VO-VP dissociation indicative of additional, higher-order processing of vestibular signals. We provide evidence of perceptual processes (ultimately cortical) participating in vestibular compensation, suppressing asymmetry acutely in unilateral vestibular lesions.
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spelling pubmed-36500152013-05-13 Vestibular Perception following Acute Unilateral Vestibular Lesions Cousins, Sian Kaski, Diego Cutfield, Nicholas Seemungal, Barry Golding, John F. Gresty, Michael Glasauer, Stefan Bronstein, Adolfo M. PLoS One Research Article Little is known about the vestibulo-perceptual (VP) system, particularly after a unilateral vestibular lesion. We investigated vestibulo-ocular (VO) and VP function in 25 patients with vestibular neuritis (VN) acutely (2 days after onset) and after compensation (recovery phase, 10 weeks). Since the effect of VN on reflex and perceptual function may differ at threshold and supra-threshold acceleration levels, we used two stimulus intensities, acceleration steps of 0.5°/s(2) and velocity steps of 90°/s (acceleration 180°/s(2)). We hypothesised that the vestibular lesion or the compensatory processes could dissociate VO and VP function, particularly if the acute vertiginous sensation interferes with the perceptual tasks. Both in acute and recovery phases, VO and VP thresholds increased, particularly during ipsilesional rotations. In signal detection theory this indicates that signals from the healthy and affected side are still fused, but result in asymmetric thresholds due to a lesion-induced bias. The normal pattern whereby VP thresholds are higher than VO thresholds was preserved, indicating that any ‘perceptual noise’ added by the vertigo does not disrupt the cognitive decision-making processes inherent to the perceptual task. Overall, the parallel findings in VO and VP thresholds imply little or no additional cortical processing and suggest that vestibular thresholds essentially reflect the sensitivity of the fused peripheral receptors. In contrast, a significant VO-VP dissociation for supra-threshold stimuli was found. Acutely, time constants and duration of the VO and VP responses were reduced – asymmetrically for VO, as expected, but surprisingly symmetrical for perception. At recovery, VP responses normalised but VO responses remained shortened and asymmetric. Thus, unlike threshold data, supra-threshold responses show considerable VO-VP dissociation indicative of additional, higher-order processing of vestibular signals. We provide evidence of perceptual processes (ultimately cortical) participating in vestibular compensation, suppressing asymmetry acutely in unilateral vestibular lesions. Public Library of Science 2013-05-09 /pmc/articles/PMC3650015/ /pubmed/23671577 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0061862 Text en © 2013 Cousins et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Cousins, Sian
Kaski, Diego
Cutfield, Nicholas
Seemungal, Barry
Golding, John F.
Gresty, Michael
Glasauer, Stefan
Bronstein, Adolfo M.
Vestibular Perception following Acute Unilateral Vestibular Lesions
title Vestibular Perception following Acute Unilateral Vestibular Lesions
title_full Vestibular Perception following Acute Unilateral Vestibular Lesions
title_fullStr Vestibular Perception following Acute Unilateral Vestibular Lesions
title_full_unstemmed Vestibular Perception following Acute Unilateral Vestibular Lesions
title_short Vestibular Perception following Acute Unilateral Vestibular Lesions
title_sort vestibular perception following acute unilateral vestibular lesions
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3650015/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23671577
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0061862
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