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Large gaze shift generation while standing: the role of the vestibular system

The functional significance of vestibular information for the generation of gaze shifts is controversial and less well established than the vestibular contribution to gaze stability. In this study, we asked seven bilaterally avestibular patients to execute voluntary, whole body pivot turns to visual...

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Autores principales: Anastasopoulos, Dimitri, Ziavra, Nausika, Bronstein, Adolfo M.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Physiological Society 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6879955/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31483710
http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/jn.00343.2019
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author Anastasopoulos, Dimitri
Ziavra, Nausika
Bronstein, Adolfo M.
author_facet Anastasopoulos, Dimitri
Ziavra, Nausika
Bronstein, Adolfo M.
author_sort Anastasopoulos, Dimitri
collection PubMed
description The functional significance of vestibular information for the generation of gaze shifts is controversial and less well established than the vestibular contribution to gaze stability. In this study, we asked seven bilaterally avestibular patients to execute voluntary, whole body pivot turns to visual targets up to 180° while standing. In these conditions, not only are the demands imposed on gaze transfer mechanisms more challenging, but also neck proprioceptive input represents an inadequate source of head-in-space motion information. Patients’ body segment was slower and jerky. In the absence of visual feedback, gaze advanced in small steps, closely resembling normal multiple-step gaze-shift patterns, but as a consequence of the slow head motion, target acquisition was delayed. In ~25% of trials, however, patients moved faster but the velocity of prematurely emerging slow-phase compensatory eye movements remained lower than head-in-space velocity due to vestibuloocular failure. During these trials, therefore, gaze advanced toward the target without interruption but, again, taking longer than when normal controls use single-step gaze transfers. That is, even when patients attempted faster gaze shifts, exposing themselves to gaze instability, they acquired distant targets significantly later than controls. Thus, while patients are upright, loss of vestibular information disrupts not only gaze stability but also gaze transfers. The slow and ataxic head and trunk movements introduce significant foveation delays. These deficits explain patients’ symptoms during upright activities and show, for the first time, the clinical significance of losing the so-called “anticompensatory” (gaze shifting) function of the vestibuloocular reflex. NEW & NOTEWORTHY Previous studies in sitting avestibular patients concluded that gaze transfers are not substantially compromised. Still, clinicians know that patients are impeded (e.g., looking side to side before crossing a road). We show that during large gaze transfers while standing, vestibularly derived head velocity signals are critical for the mechanisms governing reorientation to distant targets and multisegmental coordination. Our findings go beyond the traditional role of the vestibular system in gaze stability, extending it to gaze transfers, as well.
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spelling pubmed-68799552019-12-03 Large gaze shift generation while standing: the role of the vestibular system Anastasopoulos, Dimitri Ziavra, Nausika Bronstein, Adolfo M. J Neurophysiol Research Article The functional significance of vestibular information for the generation of gaze shifts is controversial and less well established than the vestibular contribution to gaze stability. In this study, we asked seven bilaterally avestibular patients to execute voluntary, whole body pivot turns to visual targets up to 180° while standing. In these conditions, not only are the demands imposed on gaze transfer mechanisms more challenging, but also neck proprioceptive input represents an inadequate source of head-in-space motion information. Patients’ body segment was slower and jerky. In the absence of visual feedback, gaze advanced in small steps, closely resembling normal multiple-step gaze-shift patterns, but as a consequence of the slow head motion, target acquisition was delayed. In ~25% of trials, however, patients moved faster but the velocity of prematurely emerging slow-phase compensatory eye movements remained lower than head-in-space velocity due to vestibuloocular failure. During these trials, therefore, gaze advanced toward the target without interruption but, again, taking longer than when normal controls use single-step gaze transfers. That is, even when patients attempted faster gaze shifts, exposing themselves to gaze instability, they acquired distant targets significantly later than controls. Thus, while patients are upright, loss of vestibular information disrupts not only gaze stability but also gaze transfers. The slow and ataxic head and trunk movements introduce significant foveation delays. These deficits explain patients’ symptoms during upright activities and show, for the first time, the clinical significance of losing the so-called “anticompensatory” (gaze shifting) function of the vestibuloocular reflex. NEW & NOTEWORTHY Previous studies in sitting avestibular patients concluded that gaze transfers are not substantially compromised. Still, clinicians know that patients are impeded (e.g., looking side to side before crossing a road). We show that during large gaze transfers while standing, vestibularly derived head velocity signals are critical for the mechanisms governing reorientation to distant targets and multisegmental coordination. Our findings go beyond the traditional role of the vestibular system in gaze stability, extending it to gaze transfers, as well. American Physiological Society 2019-11-01 2019-09-04 /pmc/articles/PMC6879955/ /pubmed/31483710 http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/jn.00343.2019 Text en Copyright © 2019 the American Physiological Society http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/deed.en_US Licensed under Creative Commons Attribution CC-BY 4.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/deed.en_US) : © the American Physiological Society.
spellingShingle Research Article
Anastasopoulos, Dimitri
Ziavra, Nausika
Bronstein, Adolfo M.
Large gaze shift generation while standing: the role of the vestibular system
title Large gaze shift generation while standing: the role of the vestibular system
title_full Large gaze shift generation while standing: the role of the vestibular system
title_fullStr Large gaze shift generation while standing: the role of the vestibular system
title_full_unstemmed Large gaze shift generation while standing: the role of the vestibular system
title_short Large gaze shift generation while standing: the role of the vestibular system
title_sort large gaze shift generation while standing: the role of the vestibular system
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6879955/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31483710
http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/jn.00343.2019
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