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Article type: Research Article
Authors: Cleworth, Taylor W.a; b | Kessler, Paulc | Honegger, Flurind | Carpenter, Mark G.e | Allum, John H.J.d; *
Affiliations: [a] School of Kinesiology and Health Science, Faculty of Health, York University, Toronto, Canada | [b] Center for Vision Research, York University, Toronto, Canada | [c] Department of ORL, Cantonal Hospital of Basel-Land, Liestal, Switzerland | [d] Department of ORL, University of Basel Hospital, Basel, Switzerland | [e] School of Kinesiology, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada
Correspondence: [*] Corresponding author: Prof. Dr. Biomed. Eng. J.H.J. Allum, Department of Audiology and Neurootology, University Hospital Basel, CH-4031 Basel, Switzerland. Tel.: +41 61 265 2041; Fax: +41 61 265 2750; E-mail: john.allum@usb.ch.
Abstract: BACKGROUND AND AIMS:An acute unilateral peripheral vestibular deficit (aUPVD) due to vestibular neuritis causes deficient yaw axis vestibular ocular reflex (VOR) gains. Using video head impulse tests (vHITs), we examined phasic and tonic velocity gains of the VOR over time to determine if these differed at onset and during subsequent improvement. METHODS:The VOR responses of 61 patients were examined within 5 days of aUPVD onset, and 3 and 7 weeks later using vHIT with mean peak yaw angular velocities of 177°/s (sd 45°/s) and mean peak accelerations of 3660°/s2 (sd 1300°/s2). The phasic velocity or acceleration gain (aG) was computed as the ratio of eye to head velocity around peak head acceleration, and the tonic velocity gain (vG) was calculated as the same ratio around peak head velocity. RESULTS:aG increased ipsi-deficit from 0.45 at onset to 0.67 at 3 weeks and 7 weeks later, and vG increased ipsi-deficit from 0.29 to 0.51 and 0.53, respectively, yielding a significant time effect (p < 0.001). Deficit side aG was significantly greater (p < 0.001) than vG at all time points. Deficit side gain improvements in aG and vG were similar. Contra-deficit aG increased from 0.86 to 0.95 and 0.94 at 3 weeks and 7 weeks, and vG contra-deficit increased from 0.84, to 0.89 and 0.87, respectively, also yielding a significant time effect (p = 0.004). Contra-deficit aG and vG were normal at 3 weeks. Mean canal paresis values improved from 91% to 67% over the 7 weeks. CONCLUSIONS:Acceleration and velocity VOR gains on the deficit side are reduced by aUPVD and improve most in the first 3 weeks after aUPVD onset. Deficit side aG is consistently higher than deficit side vG following an aUPVD, suggesting that acceleration rather than velocity sensitive compensatory neural mechanisms are predominant during the compensation process for aUPVD.
Keywords: Vestibular loss, vestibular neuritis, head impulse test, vestibular ocular reflex, neural compensation
DOI: 10.3233/VES-210153
Journal: Journal of Vestibular Research, vol. 32, no. 6, pp. 517-527, 2022
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