Horizontal eye position affects measured vertical VOR gain on the video head impulse test

被引:81
作者
McGarvie, Leigh A. [1 ]
Martinez-Lopez, Marta [2 ]
Burgess, Ann M. [3 ]
MacDougall, Hamish G. [3 ]
Curthoys, Ian S. [3 ]
机构
[1] Royal Prince Alfred Hosp, Dept Neurol, Inst Clin Neurosci, Camperdown, NSW 2050, Australia
[2] Univ Navarra Clin, Dept Otorhinolaryngol, Pamplona, Spain
[3] Univ Sydney, Sch Psychol, Vestibular Res Lab, Sydney, NSW 2006, Australia
关键词
vestibular; vestibulo-ocular reflex; vHIT; semicircular canal; eye movement;
D O I
10.3389/fneur.2015.00058
中图分类号
R74 [神经病学与精神病学];
学科分类号
摘要
Background/hypothesis:With the video head impulse test (vHIT), the vertical VOR gain is defined as (vertical eye velocity/vertical head velocity), but compensatory eye movements to vertical canal stimulation usually have a torsional component. To minimize the contribution of torsion to the eye movement measurement, the horizontal gaze direction should be directed 40 degrees from straight ahead so it is in the plane of the stimulated canal plane pair. Hypothesis: as gaze is systematically moved horizontally away from canal plane alignment, the measured vertical VOR gain should decrease. Study design:Ten healthy subjects, with vHIT measuring vertical eye movement to head impulses in the plane of the left anterior-right posterior (CARP) canal plane, with gaze at one of five horizontal gaze positions [40 degrees (aligned with the CARP plane), 20 degrees, 0 degrees, -20 degrees, -40 degrees]. Methods: Every head impulse was in the CARP plane. The compensatory eye movement was measured by the vHIT prototype system. The one operator delivered every impulse. Results:The canal stimulus remained identical across trials, but the measured vertical VOR gain decreased as horizontal gaze angle was shifted away from alignment with the CARP canal plane. Conclusion: In measuring vertical VOR gain with vHIT the horizontal gaze angle should be aligned with the canal plane under test.
引用
收藏
页数:6
相关论文
共 14 条
[1]   Three-dimensional vector analysis of the human vestibuloocular reflex in response to high-acceleration head rotations .2. Responses in subjects with unilateral vestibular loss and selective semicircular canal occlusion [J].
Aw, ST ;
Halmagyi, GM ;
Haslwanter, T ;
Curthoys, IS ;
Yavor, RA ;
Todd, MJ .
JOURNAL OF NEUROPHYSIOLOGY, 1996, 76 (06) :4021-4030
[2]   PLANAR RELATIONSHIPS OF SEMICIRCULAR CANALS IN MAN [J].
BLANKS, RHI ;
CURTHOYS, IS ;
MARKHAM, CH .
ACTA OTO-LARYNGOLOGICA, 1975, 80 (3-4) :185-196
[3]   A Mathematical Model of Human Semicircular Canal Geometry: A New Basis for Interpreting Vestibular Physiology [J].
Bradshaw, Andrew P. ;
Curthoys, Ian S. ;
Todd, Michael J. ;
Magnussen, John S. ;
Taubman, David S. ;
Aw, Swee T. ;
Halmagyi, G. Michael .
JARO-JOURNAL OF THE ASSOCIATION FOR RESEARCH IN OTOLARYNGOLOGY, 2010, 11 (02) :145-159
[4]   Semicircular canal plane head impulses detect absent function of individual semicircular canals [J].
Cremer, PD ;
Halmagyi, GM ;
Aw, ST ;
Curthoys, IS ;
McGarvie, LA ;
Todd, MJ ;
Black, RA ;
Hannigan, IP .
BRAIN, 1998, 121 :699-716
[5]   Posterior semicircular canal nystagmus is conjugate and its axis is parallel to that of the canal [J].
Cremer, PD ;
Migliaccio, AA ;
Pohl, DV ;
Curthoys, IS ;
Davies, L ;
Yavor, RA ;
Halmagyi, GM .
NEUROLOGY, 2000, 54 (10) :2016-2020
[6]   Eye movements in patients with superior canal dehiscence syndrome align with the abnormal canal [J].
Cremer, PD ;
Minor, LB ;
Carey, JP ;
Della Santina, CC .
NEUROLOGY, 2000, 55 (12) :1833-1841
[7]   The interpretation of clinical tests of peripheral vestibular function [J].
Curthoys, Ian S. .
LARYNGOSCOPE, 2012, 122 (06) :1342-1352
[8]  
Curthoys IS, 2014, BALANCE FUNCTION ASS, P391
[9]  
Field A., 2009, Discovering statistics with SPSS, V3rd
[10]   Vestibular function after acute vestibular neuritis [J].
Halmagyi, G. M. ;
Weber, K. P. ;
Curthoys, I. S. .
RESTORATIVE NEUROLOGY AND NEUROSCIENCE, 2010, 28 (01) :37-46