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Balance recovery and its link to vestibular agnosia in traumatic brain injury: a longitudinal behavioural and neuro-imaging study.

Authors :
Hadi, Zaeem
Mahmud, Mohammad
Calzolari, Elena
Chepisheva, Mariya
Zimmerman, Karl A.
Tahtis, Vassilios
Smith, Rebecca M.
Rust, Heiko M.
Sharp, David J.
Seemungal, Barry M.
Source :
Journal of Neurology; Feb2025, Vol. 272 Issue 2, p1-15, 15p
Publication Year :
2025

Abstract

Background: Vestibular dysfunction causing imbalance affects c. 80% of acute hospitalized traumatic brain injury (TBI) cases. Poor balance recovery is linked to worse return-to-work rates and reduced longevity. We previously showed that white matter network disruption, particularly of right inferior longitudinal fasciculus, mediates the overlap between imbalance and impaired vestibular perception of self-motion (i.e., vestibular agnosia) in acute hospitalized TBI. However, there are no prior reports tracking the acute-longitudinal trajectory of objectively measured vestibular function for hospitalized TBI patients. We hypothesized that recovery of vestibular agnosia and imbalance is linked and mediated by overlapping brain networks. Methods: We screened 918 acute major trauma in-patients, assessed 146, recruited 39 acutely, and retested 34 at 6 months. Inclusion criteria were 18–65-year-old adults hospitalized for TBI with laboratory-confirmed preserved peripheral vestibular function. Benign paroxysmal positional vertigo and migraine were treated prior to testing. Vestibular agnosia was quantified by participants' ability to perceive whole-body yaw plane rotations via an automated rotating-chair algorithm. Subjective symptoms of imbalance (via questionnaires) and objective imbalance (via posturography) were also assessed. Results: Acute vestibular agnosia predicted poor balance recovery at 6 months. Recovery of vestibular agnosia and linked imbalance was mediated by bihemispheric fronto-posterior cortical circuits. Recovery of subjective symptoms of imbalance and objective imbalance were not correlated. Conclusion: Vestibular agnosia mediates balance recovery post-TBI. The link between subjective dizziness and brain injury recovery, although important, is unclear. Therapeutic trials of vestibular recovery post-TBI should target enhancing bi-hemispheric connectivity and linked objective clinical measures (e.g., posturography). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03405354
Volume :
272
Issue :
2
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Journal of Neurology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
182240344
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00415-024-12876-2