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Electrical Vestibular Stimulation after Vestibular Deafferentation and in Vestibular Schwannoma

BACKGROUND: Vestibular reflexes, evoked by human electrical (galvanic) vestibular stimulation (EVS), are utilized to assess vestibular function and investigate its pathways. Our study aimed to investigate the electrically-evoked vestibulo-ocular reflex (eVOR) output after bilateral and unilateral ve...

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Autores principales: Aw, Swee Tin, Todd, Michael John, Lehnen, Nadine, Aw, Grace Elizabeth, Weber, Konrad Peter, Eggert, Thomas, Halmagyi, Gabor Michael
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3861342/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24349188
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0082078
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author Aw, Swee Tin
Todd, Michael John
Lehnen, Nadine
Aw, Grace Elizabeth
Weber, Konrad Peter
Eggert, Thomas
Halmagyi, Gabor Michael
author_facet Aw, Swee Tin
Todd, Michael John
Lehnen, Nadine
Aw, Grace Elizabeth
Weber, Konrad Peter
Eggert, Thomas
Halmagyi, Gabor Michael
author_sort Aw, Swee Tin
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Vestibular reflexes, evoked by human electrical (galvanic) vestibular stimulation (EVS), are utilized to assess vestibular function and investigate its pathways. Our study aimed to investigate the electrically-evoked vestibulo-ocular reflex (eVOR) output after bilateral and unilateral vestibular deafferentations to determine the characteristics for interpreting unilateral lesions such as vestibular schwannomas. METHODS: EVOR was recorded with dual-search coils as binocular three-dimensional eye movements evoked by bipolar 100 ms-step at EVS intensities of [0.9, 2.5, 5.0, 7.5, 10.0]mA and unipolar 100 ms-step at 5 mA EVS intensity. Five bilateral vestibular deafferented (BVD), 12 unilateral vestibular deafferented (UVD), four unilateral vestibular schwannoma (UVS) patients and 17 healthy subjects were tested with bipolar EVS, and five UVDs with unipolar EVS. RESULTS: After BVD, bipolar EVS elicited no eVOR. After UVD, bipolar EVS of one functioning ear elicited bidirectional, excitatory eVOR to cathodal EVS with 9 ms latency and inhibitory eVOR to anodal EVS, opposite in direction, at half the amplitude with 12 ms latency, exhibiting an excitatory-inhibitory asymmetry. The eVOR patterns from UVS were consistent with responses from UVD confirming the vestibular loss on the lesion side. Unexpectedly, unipolar EVS of the UVD ear, instead of absent response, evoked one-third the bipolar eVOR while unipolar EVS of the functioning ear evoked half the bipolar response. CONCLUSIONS: The bidirectional eVOR evoked by bipolar EVS from UVD with an excitatory-inhibitory asymmetry and the 3 ms latency difference between normal and lesion side may be useful for detecting vestibular lesions such as UVS. We suggest that current spread could account for the small eVOR to 5 mA unipolar EVS of the UVD ear.
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spelling pubmed-38613422013-12-17 Electrical Vestibular Stimulation after Vestibular Deafferentation and in Vestibular Schwannoma Aw, Swee Tin Todd, Michael John Lehnen, Nadine Aw, Grace Elizabeth Weber, Konrad Peter Eggert, Thomas Halmagyi, Gabor Michael PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Vestibular reflexes, evoked by human electrical (galvanic) vestibular stimulation (EVS), are utilized to assess vestibular function and investigate its pathways. Our study aimed to investigate the electrically-evoked vestibulo-ocular reflex (eVOR) output after bilateral and unilateral vestibular deafferentations to determine the characteristics for interpreting unilateral lesions such as vestibular schwannomas. METHODS: EVOR was recorded with dual-search coils as binocular three-dimensional eye movements evoked by bipolar 100 ms-step at EVS intensities of [0.9, 2.5, 5.0, 7.5, 10.0]mA and unipolar 100 ms-step at 5 mA EVS intensity. Five bilateral vestibular deafferented (BVD), 12 unilateral vestibular deafferented (UVD), four unilateral vestibular schwannoma (UVS) patients and 17 healthy subjects were tested with bipolar EVS, and five UVDs with unipolar EVS. RESULTS: After BVD, bipolar EVS elicited no eVOR. After UVD, bipolar EVS of one functioning ear elicited bidirectional, excitatory eVOR to cathodal EVS with 9 ms latency and inhibitory eVOR to anodal EVS, opposite in direction, at half the amplitude with 12 ms latency, exhibiting an excitatory-inhibitory asymmetry. The eVOR patterns from UVS were consistent with responses from UVD confirming the vestibular loss on the lesion side. Unexpectedly, unipolar EVS of the UVD ear, instead of absent response, evoked one-third the bipolar eVOR while unipolar EVS of the functioning ear evoked half the bipolar response. CONCLUSIONS: The bidirectional eVOR evoked by bipolar EVS from UVD with an excitatory-inhibitory asymmetry and the 3 ms latency difference between normal and lesion side may be useful for detecting vestibular lesions such as UVS. We suggest that current spread could account for the small eVOR to 5 mA unipolar EVS of the UVD ear. Public Library of Science 2013-12-12 /pmc/articles/PMC3861342/ /pubmed/24349188 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0082078 Text en © 2013 Aw 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
Aw, Swee Tin
Todd, Michael John
Lehnen, Nadine
Aw, Grace Elizabeth
Weber, Konrad Peter
Eggert, Thomas
Halmagyi, Gabor Michael
Electrical Vestibular Stimulation after Vestibular Deafferentation and in Vestibular Schwannoma
title Electrical Vestibular Stimulation after Vestibular Deafferentation and in Vestibular Schwannoma
title_full Electrical Vestibular Stimulation after Vestibular Deafferentation and in Vestibular Schwannoma
title_fullStr Electrical Vestibular Stimulation after Vestibular Deafferentation and in Vestibular Schwannoma
title_full_unstemmed Electrical Vestibular Stimulation after Vestibular Deafferentation and in Vestibular Schwannoma
title_short Electrical Vestibular Stimulation after Vestibular Deafferentation and in Vestibular Schwannoma
title_sort electrical vestibular stimulation after vestibular deafferentation and in vestibular schwannoma
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3861342/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24349188
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0082078
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