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Article type: Research Article
Authors: Di Girolamo, S.a; | Di Nardo, W.a | Cosenza, A.a | Ottaviani, F.a | Dickmann, A.b | Savino, G.b
Affiliations: [a] Institute of Otorhinolaryngology of the Catholic University of the Sacred Heart, Largo Agostino Gemelli, 8, I-00168 Rome, Italy | [b] Institute of Ophthalmology of the Catholic University of the Sacred Heart, Largo Agostino Gemelli, 8, I-00168 Rome, Italy
Note: [*] Address for correspondence and proofs: Stefano Di Girolamo, Clinica Otorinolaringoiatrica, Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore, Largo A. Gemelli, 00168 Roma, Italy. Tel.: +39 0630154439; Fax: +39 063151343; E-mail: sdigirolamo@rm.unicatt.it
Abstract: The role of vision in postural control is crucial and is strictly related to the characteristics of the visual stimulus and to the performance of the visual system. The purpose of this investigation was to evaluate the effects of chronically reduced visual cues upon postural control in patients affected by Congenital Nystagmus (CN). These patients have developed since birth a postural strategy mainly based on vestibular and somatosensorial cues. Fifteen patients affected by CN and 15 normal controls (NC) were enrolled in the study and evaluated by means of dynamic posturography. The overall postural control in CN patients was impaired as demonstrated by the equilibrium score and by the changes of the postural strategy. This impairment was even more enhanced in CN than in NC group when somatosensorial cues were experimentally reduced. An aspecific pattern of visual impairment and a pathological composite score were also present. Our data outline that in patients affected by CN an impairment of the postural balance is present especially when the postural control relies mainly on visual cues. Moreover, a decrease in accuracy of the somatosensory cues has a proportionally greater effect on balance than it has on normal subjects.
Keywords: congenital nystagmus, postural control, dynamic posturography
DOI: 10.3233/VES-1999-9606
Journal: Journal of Vestibular Research, vol. 9, no. 6, pp. 445-451, 1999
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