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Transiently Worse Postural Effects after Vestibulo-ocular Reflex Gain-Down Adaptation in Healthy Adults

bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory)(2024)

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摘要
Suffering an acute asymmetry in vestibular function (i.e. vestibular neuritis) causes increased sway. Non-causal studies report associations between lateral semicircular canal function and balance ability, but direct links remains controversial. We investigate the immediate effect on body sway after unilateral vestibulo-ocular reflex (VOR) gain down adaptation simulating acute peripheral vestibular hypofunction. Eighteen healthy adults, mean age 27.4 (± 12.4), stood wearing an inertial measurement device with their eyes closed on foam before and after incremental VOR gain down adaptation to simulate mild unilateral vestibular neuritis. Active head impulse VOR gain was measured before and after the adaptation to ensure VOR gain adaptation. Percentage change for VOR gain and sway area were determined. Sway area was compared before and after VOR adaptation. VOR gain decreased unilaterally exceeding meaningful change values. Sway area was significantly greater immediately after VOR gain down adaptation, but quickly returned to baseline. In a subset of subjects VOR gain was re-assessed and found to remain adapted despite sway normalization. These results indicate that oculomotor adaptation targeting the lateral semicircular canal VOR pathways have an immediate, albeit transient increase in body sway. Rapid return of body sway to baseline levels suggests dynamic sensory reweighting between vestibular and somatosensory inputs to resolve the undesirable increased body sway.### Competing Interest StatementFunding: This project has been supported in part by National Institutes of Health (K23 DC018303, Eric Anson PI) and the Vestibular Disorders Association (Travel Grant, Eric Anson). The authors report no other competing interests. Acknowledgement: We thank Professor Americo A. Migliaccio and Mr. Christopher J. Todd from the Balance and Vision Laboratory, Neuroscience Research Australia, for building the StableEyes devices and related software used in this study.
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Vestibular
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