Volume 15, Number 5-6
2005
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Vestibular function in migraine-related dizziness: A pilot study
pp. 327 - 332
Joseph M. Furman, Patrick J. Sparto, Michael Soso, Dawn Marcus
Migraine-related dizziness (MRD) refers to a disorder in which
vestibular symptoms are an integral part of migraine
symptomatology. The purpose of this study was to better define
the pathophysiology of MRD, which is incompletely understood and
to generate hypotheses regarding MRD by assessing the
semicircular canal-ocular reflex, the otolith-ocular reflex,
visual-vestibular interaction, vestibulo-spinal function, and
visually induced postural sway. Subjects included five subjects
with MRD, five subjects with migraine without dizziness, and
five headache-free controls. Subjects with migraine were tested
interictally. Results indicated that the mean gain of the
semicircular canal-ocular reflex during both sinusoidal and
constant velocity rotation was reduced in subjects with MRD. No
changes were noted in the dynamics of the semicircular
canal-ocular reflex. The otolith-ocular reflex, assessed with
constant velocity OVAR, indicated that subjects with MRD showed
a larger modulation component. No group differences were found
in the bias component during constant velocity OVAR, nor in
semicircular canal-otolith interaction or visual-vestibular
interaction. Computerized dynamic posturography indicated that
subjects with MRD demonstrated a surface-dependent pattern.
Postural sway during optic flow indicated that subjects with MRD
swayed more than the other subjects. We hypothesize that
competing processes of serotonergic excitation and inhibition
alter central vestibular pathways differently for semicircular
canal vs. otolithic responses and for vestibulo-ocular vs.
vestibulo-spinal pathways.
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