Search results for "Vestibulo–ocular reflex"

showing 9 items of 9 documents

Anatomical correlates of ocular motor deficits in cerebellar lesions

2009

Humans are able to stabilize the images of moving targets on the retina by means of smooth pursuit eye movements. After the pontine level, all smooth pursuit pathways pass through the cerebellum. Previous animal studies gave evidence that two specific lesion sites within the cerebellum cause smooth pursuit disorders: those of the flocculus/paraflocculus and the vermis including lobule VI, VII, the uvula and the deep cerebellar nuclei. To date, there have been only a few lesion studies in patients with smooth pursuit disorders that do not allow direct comparison with a control group. In the present study, new lesion mapping techniques determined which cerebellar structures were involved in p…

AdultBrain InfarctionMalegenetic structuresFlocculusSmooth pursuitOcular Motility DisordersCerebellumHumansAgedAged 80 and overBrain MappingEye movementReflex Vestibulo-OcularOptokinetic reflexAnatomyMiddle AgedPursuit SmoothElectrooculographyAcute DiseaseFixation (visual)Cerebellar vermisReflexFemalesense organsNeurology (clinical)Vestibulo–ocular reflexPsychologyNeuroscienceBrain
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Medial Vestibular Nucleus Lesions in Wallenberg's Syndrome Cause Decreased Activity of the Contralateral Vestibular Cortex

2005

Three patients with the clinical diagnosis of Wallenberg's syndrome caused by acute unilateral ischemic infarctions, which included the vestibular nucleus in the medullary brain stem and afferent vestibular pathways, were examined by positron emission tomography (PET) during caloric vestibular stimulation. They all had typical signs of vestibular dysfunction such as transient rotatory vertigo with vomiting at the onset, ipsiversive body and ocular lateropulsion, and a complete ocular tilt reaction with tilts of the subjective visual vertical. Compared with healthy volunteers, who show activation in a network of temporoparietal vestibular areas within both hemispheres, especially in the post…

AdultMaleMedial vestibular nucleusFunctional LateralityGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyLesionHistory and Philosophy of ScienceVestibular nucleiotorhinolaryngologic diseasesmedicineHumansLateral Medullary SyndromeCerebral CortexVestibular systemGeneral NeuroscienceCaloric theoryAnatomyMiddle AgedMagnetic Resonance ImagingVestibular cortexPositron-Emission TomographyVestibule Labyrinthsense organsmedicine.symptomVestibulo–ocular reflexPsychologyInsulaAnnals of the New York Academy of Sciences
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Nonlinear nystagmus processing causes torsional VOR nonlinearity.

2003

The eye movement component that rotates around the line of sight, i.e., the ocular torsion, is in many aspects different from horizontal and vertical eye movements. While ocular torsion is mediated only by reflexive pathways like the torsional vestibulo-ocular and optokinetic reflexes (TVOR and OKN, respectively), horizontal and vertical components are also subject to intentional control mechanisms that are mediated by the saccadic and the pursuit systems. Dynamic properties of torsional eye movements are also very distinct. While horizontal and vertical VOR components show a gain close to unity and a small neural integration leakage with a time constant around pi=30 s, the TVOR shows a sma…

genetic structuresEye MovementsRotationModels NeurologicalNystagmusGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyOtolithic MembraneHistory and Philosophy of ScienceNystagmus PhysiologicControl theorymedicineHumansComputer SimulationPhysicsGeneral NeuroscienceTime constantTorsion (mechanics)Eye movementOptokinetic reflexReflex Vestibulo-Oculareye diseasesSaccadic maskingSemicircular CanalsNonlinear systemHead MovementsVestibulo–ocular reflexmedicine.symptomAnnals of the New York Academy of Sciences
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Comparative study of the effect of gentamicin on the vestibulo-ocular and visual vestibulo-ocular reflexes in the cat.

1991

The ototoxic effect of an aminoglycoside, gentamicin, on the vestibular system was investigated in cats given daily doses of 40 mg/kg i.m. for 14 days. Periodically, measurements were made of the vestibulo-ocular reflex (VOR) and visual vestibulo-ocular reflex (ViVOR) responses induced by rotatory stimuli at various frequencies from 0.0125 Hz to 0.8 Hz. After the cessation of drug administration, a progressively declining response to VOR stimuli continued, manifested by gain (ratio of peak response to peak stimulus amplitude) and phase relationships. The ViVOR was affected only in the gain measurements. The changes in the response amplitude (gain) were greater for the VOR than for the ViVOR…

Vestibular systemmedicine.medical_specialtyCATSgenetic structuresbusiness.industryAminoglycosideGeneral MedicineReflex Vestibulo-OcularAudiologyVestibular Function TestsPeak responseOtorhinolaryngologyReflexCatsMedicineAnimalsGentamicinsense organsProspective StudiesVestibulo–ocular reflexGentamicinsbusinessAfter treatmentPhotic Stimulationmedicine.drugActa oto-laryngologica
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Firing characteristics of vestibular nuclei neurons in the alert monkey after bilateral vestibular neurectomy

1992

After destruction of the peripheral vestibular system which is not activated by moving large-field visual stimulation, not only labyrinthine-ocular reflexes but also optokinetic-ocular responses related to the "velocity storage" mechanism are abolished. In the normal monkey optokinetic-ocular responses are reflected in sustained activity changes of central vestibular neurons within the vestibular nuclei. To account for the loss of optokinetic responses after labyrinthectomy, inactivation of central vestibular neurons consequent on the loss of primary vestibular activity is assumed to be of major importance. To test this hypothesis we recorded the neural activity within the vestibular nuclea…

Eye Movementsgenetic structuresWheat Germ AgglutininsWheat Germ Agglutinin-Horseradish Peroxidase ConjugateVestibular NerveSmooth pursuitVestibular nucleiotorhinolaryngologic diseasesAnimalsHorseradish PeroxidaseNeuronsVestibular systemHistocytochemistryMuscimolGeneral NeuroscienceVestibular pathwayAnatomyOptokinetic reflexVestibular NucleiMacaca mulattaElectrophysiologyEar InnerReflexsense organsVestibulo–ocular reflexPsychologyNeurosciencePhotic StimulationExperimental Brain Research
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15. Functional mapping of monaural auditory brainstem responses

2012

Background and aims: The pedunculopontine nucleus (PPN) is a new deep brain stimulation (DBS) target, thought to be particularly for useful in ameliorating gait disturbance in Parkinson’s disease. Recent evidence shows a prominent theta (4–7 Hz) rhythm in the PPN (Tsang et al., Neurology, 2010; Simon et al., J. Neurophysiol., 2010; Shimamoto et al., JNNP, 2010). Given that theta activity is modulated by vestibular signals elsewhere in the brain, e.g. hippocampus, (Shin, Synapse, 2010; Chen et al., Neuroimage, 2010), we assessed whether vestibular signals modulate PPN theta activity. Methods: We recorded local field potentials (LFPs) in three patients with implanted bilateral subthalamic nuc…

Vestibular systemPhysicsgenetic structuresOptokinetic reflexLocal field potentialNystagmusSensory SystemsSubthalamic nucleusNeurologyVestibular nucleiPhysiology (medical)medicinesense organsNeurology (clinical)Vestibulo–ocular reflexmedicine.symptomNeurosciencePedunculopontine nucleusClinical Neurophysiology
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Functional brain imaging of peripheral and central vestibular disorders.

2008

This review summarizes our current knowledge of multisensory vestibular structures and their functions in humans. Most of it derives from brain activation studies with PET and fMRI conducted over the last decade. The patterns of activations and deactivations during caloric and galvanic vestibular stimulations in healthy subjects have been compared with those in patients with acute and chronic peripheral and central vestibular disorders. Major findings are the following: (1) In patients with vestibular neuritis the central vestibular system exhibits a spontaneous visual-vestibular activation–deactivation pattern similar to that described in healthy volunteers during unilateral vestibular sti…

Vestibular systemTemperatureVestibular pathwayBrainFlocculusVestibular NerveVestibular nerveSomatosensory systemVestibular cortexMagnetic Resonance ImagingElectric StimulationVestibular nucleiPositron-Emission Tomographyotorhinolaryngologic diseasesAnimalsHumanssense organsNeurology (clinical)Vestibulo–ocular reflexNerve NetPsychologyNeuroscienceVestibular NeuronitisBrain : a journal of neurology
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Immunosuppressive treatment in bilateral vestibulopathy with inner ear antibodies.

2005

Although vestibular recovery was observed after steroid treatment, it remains uncertain whether this improvement was spontaneous or due to medication. These data do not allow us to generally recommend corticosteroid treatment in patients with BVF and inner ear antibodies.A retrospective study was performed based on the observation of two patients with suspected autoimmune bilateral vestibular failure (BVF) with normal hearing and antilabyrinthine or nervous tissue-specific serum antibodies who showed vestibular recovery after corticosteroid treatment.Twelve patients with BVF and serum inner ear antibodies who had received imuunosuppressive treatment with corticosteroids were evaluated in te…

AdultMalemedicine.medical_specialtyFluorescent Antibody TechniqueEar diseaseMethylprednisoloneNystagmus PathologicAutoimmune Diseasesotorhinolaryngologic diseasesmedicineCaloric TestsAnimalsHumansMedical historyInner earGlucocorticoidsAgedAutoantibodiesRetrospective StudiesVestibular systemmedicine.diagnostic_testbusiness.industryElectronystagmographyAutoimmune inner ear diseaseGeneral MedicineReflex Vestibulo-OcularMiddle Agedmedicine.diseaseBilateral vestibulopathySurgeryRatsmedicine.anatomical_structureTreatment OutcomeOtorhinolaryngologyElectronystagmographyVestibular DiseasesAnesthesiaEar InnerImmunoglobulin GFemalesense organsVestibulo–ocular reflexbusinessFollow-Up StudiesActa oto-laryngologica
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Mathematical Model Predicts Clinical Ocular Motor Syndromes

2003

: Clinical ocular motor syndromes were compared with ocular motor syndromes simulated by a mathematical model of the vestibuloocular reflex. The mathematical sensorimotor feedforward model of otolith control of three-dimensional binocular eye position is based on relevant anatomical connections of the vestibuloocular reflex from the utricles to extraocular eye muscles. This is the first attempt to simulate static ocular motor syndromes for unilateral utricular or vestibular nerve failure, lesions of the vestibular nucleus, and lesions of the ascending vestibuloocular reflex pathways. Comparison of the predicted syndromes with those found in patients with unilateral disorders of the vestibul…

Malegenetic structuresOcular motorNeuritisInfarctionGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyHistory and Philosophy of ScienceVestibular nucleiOculomotor Nerve DiseasesVestibulocochlear Nerve DiseasesmedicineHumansSkew deviationAgedGeneral NeuroscienceReflex Vestibulo-OcularSyndromeAnatomyMiddle AgedModels TheoreticalVestibular nerveMedial longitudinal fasciculusmedicine.diseaseeye diseasesFemalesense organsVestibulo–ocular reflexPsychologyNeuroscienceAnnals of the New York Academy of Sciences
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