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On the origin of interindividual susceptibility to motion sickness.
Scherer H, Helling K, Hausmann S, Clarke AHDepartment of Otorhinolaryngology, Benjamin Franklin Medical Center, FU Berlin, Germany.
According
to the otolith asymmetry hypothesis for susceptibility to motion
sickness, the interlabyrinthine asymmetry in the otoconial mass, which
is normally compensated in the circuity of the vestibular system by
appropriate neuronal weighting, becomes disrupted as a result of
unfamiliar movement patterns or force environments. Measurements in
various species have demonstrated a large scatter in the otoconial
mass. As the utricle and saccule have distinct functions in the
vestibular system it seems appropriate to deal with these organs
separately. Results are presented on mass distribution and lateral
preponderance of the otoconial mass in the utricles and saccules of the
salmon (Salmo salar) and trout (Salmo irideus). The measurements
revealed considerably larger dimensions of the saccular otoconia in
these species, amounting to twenty-fold. This substantial difference
indicates that different regulatory principles underlie the otoconial
generation of each of the organs and is presumably related to their
specific functions. The lateral preponderance was found to be normally
distributed for both organs in both species, with standard deviations
of approx. 4% except for the utricular otoconia of the salmon (13%). In
a second set of experiments, fish were exposed to a Coriolis force
environment. Their sealed aquarium was subjected to constant vertical
axis rotation combined with pendular oscillation around the horizontal
axis. The aquarium was illuminated by a light source fixed to project
through the top, and a video camera recorded the movements of the fish.
During combined rotation and pendular oscillation, one group of fish
maintained an active compensatory swimming behaviour, whereas the
movements of a second group became uncoordinated and often led to
passive behaviour. Analysis of the otoconia of these two groups of fish
promises to yield further evidence relevant to the otolith asymmetry
hypothesis.
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