Volume 13, Number 2-3
2003
PDF files of all articles are available from IOS
Press.
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Otolith-ocular responses in patients with surgically confirmed
unilateral peripheral vestibular loss
pp. 143 - 151
Joseph M. Furman, Li-Chi Hsu, Susan L. Whitney, Mark S. Redfern
ABSTRACT: The chronic effects of unilateral peripheral vestibular loss (UPVL)
are influenced by vestibular compensation. This study documents the balance-related
symptoms and quantitative vestibular laboratory testing of 20 patients with
surgically confirmed UPVL. Included are measures of the semicircular canal-ocular
reflex, the otolith-ocular reflex, and both static and dynamic semicircular
canal-otolith-interaction. This study differs from previous studies of
patients with UPVL in that a large number of patients with surgically
confirmed lesions were tested with three types of off-vertical axis
rotation, several of the patients had anatomically preserved superior
vestibular nerves, and self-perceived level of disability related to
dizziness and imbalance were available. Results confirmed previously
reported changes in the vestibulo-ocular reflex of patients with UPVL. Also,
there was no apparent effect of anatomically preserving the superior
vestibular nerve during surgical resection of vestibular schwannomas based
on either subjective or objective measures of vestibular dysfunction.
Further, there were no apparent correlations between subjective measures of
dizziness and imbalance and objective measures of vestibulo-ocular function.
These results have clinical implications for the management of patients
with unilateral vestibular loss and provide insights into the process of
vestibular compensation especially with respect to the otolith-ocular
reflex.
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