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Unilateral testing of utricular function.
Clarke AH, Engelhorn AVestibular Research Lab, Klinikum Benjamin Franklin, Charité Berlin, Germany. clarke@zedat.fu-berlin.de
A
modified rotatory chair test is reported in which radial acceleration,
generated by eccentric displacement of the subject during constant
angular velocity, is exploited as a unilateral stimulation to the
otolith organs. During constant angular rate rotation, the test subject
is displaced laterally on the rotating turntable by 3.5 cm, so that one
labyrinth becomes aligned with the rotatory axis while the second -
eccentric - labyrinth is solely exposed to the altered gravito-inertial
acceleration (GIA). Previously reported results showed that the
direction of the response is independent of the direction of turntable
rotation, ruling out any canal influence, and indicated that in a
normal population the response, measured in one eye, was symmetrical
for displacement of the left and right labyrinths. This mode of
stimulus thus appears to elicit a unilateral otolith-ocular response
(OOR). Examination of this unilateral OOR was extended in the present
study; comparative testing with head-tilt to gravity, i.e. involving
bilateral stimulation to the otolith organs, was carried out. Movements
of both eyes were recorded (by three-dimensional video-oculography), in
order to examine response conjugacy. To verify the specificity of the
unilateral stimulus, tests were performed with patients who had
previously undergone unilateral section of the vestibular nerve as
treatment for acoustic neuroma. The eccentric displacement profile
(EDP) and head-tilt stimulus each included ten cycles of left-right
oscillation in order to permit signal averaging. In the normal subjects
(n=12) the torsional component of the OOR proved to be both
labyrinth-symmetrical and conjugate, during both bilateral and
unilateral otolith stimulation. OOR gain (ocular torsion/GIA tilt) was
higher for bilateral than unilateral stimulation. Bilateral OORs,
obtained from three of the five unilaterally deafferented patients,
proved less symmetrical and conjugate than in the normals. Unilateral
OORs in all five patients were characteristically asymmetrical, with
little or no response during stimulation of the diseased labyrinth.
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