Central adaptation after peripheral vestibular injury

This thesis examines how the human brain adapts after peripheral vestibular injury. Vestibular perceptual function is used as a probe of cortical vestibular function. A paradigm determining vestibular perceptual thresholds to yaw axis rotation by a method of limits is described. Asymmetry in the thr...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Cutfield, Nicholas John
Other Authors: Bronstein, Adolfo
Published: Imperial College London 2013
Subjects:
610
Online Access:http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.572230
id ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-572230
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-5722302017-06-27T03:23:31ZCentral adaptation after peripheral vestibular injuryCutfield, Nicholas JohnBronstein, Adolfo2013This thesis examines how the human brain adapts after peripheral vestibular injury. Vestibular perceptual function is used as a probe of cortical vestibular function. A paradigm determining vestibular perceptual thresholds to yaw axis rotation by a method of limits is described. Asymmetry in the thresholds is induced in normal subjects with galvanic vestibular stimulation. In patients with acute vestibular neuritis, perceptual thresholds were bilaterally elevated, with less asymmetry when compared to the brainstem reflexive function. Thresholds were measured in a prospective longitudinal study in vestibular neuritis patients, assessed acutely and at follow-­‐up (n=16). Assessments comprised vestibular caloric testing, visual dependency measures, questionnaire measures of symptom load, anxiety, depression and fear of body sensations. Clinical recruitment found a low rate of correct diagnoses by referring clinicians. Symptomatic outcome at follow-up was associated with increased visual dependence, asymmetric caloric function, increased anxiety and depression. It was also associated with increased fear and anxiety of body sensations present acutely, suggesting this may be predisposing. The anatomical substrate of central compensation was investigated in patients with bilateral vestibular failure (n=12) and normal controls (n=15) using functional MRI. A novel air turbine-powered vibrating device was developed to provide high and low levels of proprioceptive stimulus to neck rotator muscles. This was combined with a horizontal visual motion paradigm in a factorial design. A lateralised interaction was found in the lateral occipital visual processing areas in the avestibular patients. In addition to the known visual-vestibular interaction, this demonstrates a visuo-proprioceptive interaction, which may reflect compensation after vestibular injury. Conclusions: Vestibular perceptual function can be measured in disease, and is elevated in patients with acute peripheral vestibulopathy. Specific psychological and physiological factors associated with clinical recovery after vestibular neuritis are proposed. Functional MRI shows that proprioceptive signals interact with visual motion signals in patients with vestibular failure.610Imperial College Londonhttp://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.572230http://hdl.handle.net/10044/1/11052Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 610
spellingShingle 610
Cutfield, Nicholas John
Central adaptation after peripheral vestibular injury
description This thesis examines how the human brain adapts after peripheral vestibular injury. Vestibular perceptual function is used as a probe of cortical vestibular function. A paradigm determining vestibular perceptual thresholds to yaw axis rotation by a method of limits is described. Asymmetry in the thresholds is induced in normal subjects with galvanic vestibular stimulation. In patients with acute vestibular neuritis, perceptual thresholds were bilaterally elevated, with less asymmetry when compared to the brainstem reflexive function. Thresholds were measured in a prospective longitudinal study in vestibular neuritis patients, assessed acutely and at follow-­‐up (n=16). Assessments comprised vestibular caloric testing, visual dependency measures, questionnaire measures of symptom load, anxiety, depression and fear of body sensations. Clinical recruitment found a low rate of correct diagnoses by referring clinicians. Symptomatic outcome at follow-up was associated with increased visual dependence, asymmetric caloric function, increased anxiety and depression. It was also associated with increased fear and anxiety of body sensations present acutely, suggesting this may be predisposing. The anatomical substrate of central compensation was investigated in patients with bilateral vestibular failure (n=12) and normal controls (n=15) using functional MRI. A novel air turbine-powered vibrating device was developed to provide high and low levels of proprioceptive stimulus to neck rotator muscles. This was combined with a horizontal visual motion paradigm in a factorial design. A lateralised interaction was found in the lateral occipital visual processing areas in the avestibular patients. In addition to the known visual-vestibular interaction, this demonstrates a visuo-proprioceptive interaction, which may reflect compensation after vestibular injury. Conclusions: Vestibular perceptual function can be measured in disease, and is elevated in patients with acute peripheral vestibulopathy. Specific psychological and physiological factors associated with clinical recovery after vestibular neuritis are proposed. Functional MRI shows that proprioceptive signals interact with visual motion signals in patients with vestibular failure.
author2 Bronstein, Adolfo
author_facet Bronstein, Adolfo
Cutfield, Nicholas John
author Cutfield, Nicholas John
author_sort Cutfield, Nicholas John
title Central adaptation after peripheral vestibular injury
title_short Central adaptation after peripheral vestibular injury
title_full Central adaptation after peripheral vestibular injury
title_fullStr Central adaptation after peripheral vestibular injury
title_full_unstemmed Central adaptation after peripheral vestibular injury
title_sort central adaptation after peripheral vestibular injury
publisher Imperial College London
publishDate 2013
url http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.572230
work_keys_str_mv AT cutfieldnicholasjohn centraladaptationafterperipheralvestibularinjury
_version_ 1718465413463932928