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Effect of convergence on the horizontal VOR in normal subjects and patients with peripheral and central vestibulopathy

Authors :
Ammar L, Ujjainwala
Callum D, Dewar
Laurel, Fifield
Caroline, Rayburn
Emily, Buenting
Jordan, Boyle
Jorge C, Kattah
Source :
Neurological sciences : official journal of the Italian Neurological Society and of the Italian Society of Clinical Neurophysiology. 43(7)
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Vestibular compensatory eye movements provide visual fixation stabilization during head movement. The anatomic pathways mediating a normal horizontal vestibulo-ocular reflex (h-VOR), when lesioned, cause spontaneous nystagmus. While previous reports address the effect of convergence on different spontaneous nystagmus types, to our knowledge, a study of acute vestibular nystagmus suppression viewing near targets comparing patients with peripheral or central vestibular lesions has not been previously reported.We attempt to clarify potential vestibular and near-reflex interaction by comparing near and far h-VOR gain in 19 healthy controls, six patients with acute/subacute peripheral vestibular lesion (PVL), and one patient with unilateral vestibular nuclear lesion (VNL) in the pontine tegmentum.The horizontal (h)-VOR in normal subjects increased with convergence in both eyes (P = 0.027, P0.001). In unilateral PVL patients, gain failed to increase in either direction (P = 0.25, P = 0.47). In contrast, when fixating at 15 cm, the h-aVOR in the VNL lesion, gain did not increase, and a right h-nystagmus developed. Even though we found inability to increase gain in PVL with near target fixation, this did not interfere with h-nystagmus suppression upon converging. Our VNL patient had normal h-nystagmus suppression viewing far distance targets and lacked near target h-nystagmus suppression.We hypothesize that normal IO/flocculus pathway suppressed spontaneous nystagmus in PVL. Impaired h-VOR near adaptation in the medial vestibular nucleus was responsible for h-nystagmus direction with fixation block. Additionally, impaired viewing distance estimate contributed to near h-nystagmus suppression failure.

Details

ISSN :
15903478
Volume :
43
Issue :
7
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Neurological sciences : official journal of the Italian Neurological Society and of the Italian Society of Clinical Neurophysiology
Accession number :
edsair.pmid..........0e96b0554eeb71efbe8c11e60003d90b