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W tym Artykule

  • Podsumowanie
  • Streszczenie
  • Wprowadzenie
  • Protokół
  • Wyniki
  • Dyskusje
  • Ujawnienia
  • Podziękowania
  • Materiały
  • Odniesienia
  • Przedruki i uprawnienia

Podsumowanie

The perception of gravity is commonly determined by the subjective visual vertical in the head upright position. The additional assessment at head tilts of ± 15° and ± 30° in the roll plane ensures increased information content for the detection of impaired graviceptive perception.

Streszczenie

Vestibular disorders are among the most common syndromes in medicine. In recent years, new vestibular diagnostic systems have been introduced that allow the examination of all semicircular canals in the clinical setting. Assessment methods of the otolithic system, which is responsible for the perception of linear acceleration and perception of gravity, are far less in clinical use. There are several experimental approaches for measuring the perception of gravity. The most frequently used method is the determination of the subjective visual vertical. This is usually measured with the head in an upright position. We present here an assessment method for testing otolith function in the roll plane. The subjective visual vertical is measured in the head upright position as well as with head inclination of ± 15° and ± 30° in the roll plane. This extended functional paradigm is an easy-to-perform clinical test of otolith function and ensures increased information content for the detection of impaired graviceptive perception.

Wprowadzenie

Impairment of otolith function can be caused by peripheral as well as by central vestibular conditions1. Peripheral vestibular causes include Meniere's disease, labyrinth infarction, as well as superior or inferior vestibular neuritis. Central otolith dysfunction can occur in lesions of central otolithic pathways from brain stem via thalamus2 to the vestibular cortex3. In addition, diminished otolith reflexes are also found in cerebellar disorders4. While a number of standardized methods, such as caloric testing or video-head impulse test, are available for the assessment of semicircular canal function, no standardized clinical measurement method exists for gravity estimation and verticality perception5.

Since the otoliths are responsible for the perception of linear acceleration, otolith function can in principle be measured by linear acceleration by recording the so-called translational vestibulo-ocular reflex (t-VOR). However, this requires the use of special and complex equipment such as a parallel swing or linear sleds4,6. For the assessment of unilateral saccular and utricular function a specific off-center centrifugation test has been developed, which could be used clinically in balance laboratories with a specific rotational chair system7. When displacing the head by 3.5–4 cm from the rotation axis, the eccentrically positioned utricle is stimulated unilaterally by a resultant centrifugal force. In this paradigm otolith function can be determined either by measuring the resulting eye torsion or the subjective visual vertical (SVV). This procedure, however, also requires sophisticated equipment and the method still shows limited sensitivities for both SVV and eye torsion assessment7. Otolith function can further be quantified through eye movement recordings. Assessment can be done in horizontal or linear acceleration, but also during head- or body tilt in the roll plane with application of 3-D videooculography. The latter allows determination of ocular torsion. The clinical application of this method is also limited due to its low sensitivity8. The perception of body verticality (i.e., the sensation that I feel my body aligned with the true vertical) can be assessed by means of the so-called subjective postural vertical. In this experimental task, patients are seated in a chair in a motorized gimbal and asked to indicate when they entered and exited the upright position, while being tilted 15 ° in the pitch or roll plane. The disadvantage of this technique is not only its elaborate experimental approach, but also that it measures both otolith and body proprioceptive signals9. Whether vestibular evoked myogenic potentials (VEMPs) are useful clinical screening tools for otolith function in various clinical disorders is still controversial10,11.

Visual tasks are currently the most frequently used clinical methods for measuring graviceptive function, which can be assessed through measurement of the subjective visual vertical (SVV)12. Seen from a precise physiological perspective, SVV is not a direct test of the otolith function alone, as the SVV is the result of a weighting between several sources of information (gravity, proprioceptive and also visual when they are available). However, for rapid clinical use, an easy application of this SVV task, the so-called bucket test, has been developed13 especially for the emergency setting, enabling immediate detection of acute disturbances of graviceptive perception. The more precise and standardized procedure consists of letting an observer align a light bar or rod with the estimated vertical. Tested in darkness in healthy individuals in an upright position, deviations are limited to ± 2° from the earth vertical14. Using the SVV task, graviceptive function has so far been assessed in a variety of neurological conditions such as stroke15,16 or Parkinson’s disease17. Furthermore, impaired SVV-perception has also been reported in unilateral18,19 or bilateral vestibular lesions20, as well as in patients with benign paroxysmal positional nystagmus21.

We here present a modified SVV assessment method, which measures SVV estimates not only in head-upright position but also at ± 15° and ± 30° head tilts in the roll plane. This paradigm increases the information content for the detection of graviceptive deficits and for systematic tilts of the SVV.

Protokół

The study was approved by the ethical committee of the Medical University of Vienna and has been performed in accordance with the ethical standards found in the Declaration of Helsinki. An informed consent was signed by all patients and controls before the study.

1. Installation of the patient in the chair

  1. Perform the measurement binocularly. Install the patient in a stable chair with a backrest and a head fixation unit. The latter maintains the patient's head in a stable and defined position and consists of an elastic headband and a u-shaped headrest, which can be fixed to each other using an adhesive strap. Place the chair in a closable cabin allowing assessment of the SVV in the dark.
  2. Position the headrest in the desired inclination angle (0°, ± 15° or ± 30°) by aligning it along the scale of a goniometer, which is attached to the chair's backrest. At the beginning of the experiment adjust the headrest at 0° inclination at suboccipital height.
  3. Place the elastic headband on the patient's head and fix it with the screw on the back. Ensure that the headband in not positioned too low on the patient's forehead, so that it does not impair eye motility.
  4. Connect the adhesive straps – on the headband and on the headrest – with each other. This ensures an optimal fixation of the head to the headrest on the chair.

2. Installation of the SVV unit

  1. Mount the SVV unit by means of the fixation device on the chair in front of the patient (Figure 1a). The SVV unit consists of a LED light bar attached to a stick, allowing positioning in front of the patient. The position of the light bar can be adjusted in the roll plane through a connected potentiometer.
  2. Make sure that the SVV unit is firmly fixed and that the light bar is positioned exactly opposite to the patient's head and at the same level as the patient's eyes.
  3. Connect the SVV unit to the electrical connection underneath the chair.
  4. Place the potentiometer in the patient's left hand and instruct them on how to perform the SVV setting. While standing in front of the patient, adjust the position of the light bar again, if necessary, to ensure its position along the coronary plane.
  5. Read the SVV deviation from the true vertical on the goniometer on the back of the SVV unit. The goniometer contains an angle display of ±20° at 2° intervals and is equipped with an infrared camera placed 3 cm in front of the display, allowing continuous data acquisition in complete darkness (Figure 1b, 1c).
  6. Before continuing with the next step, check the visibility on the screen. The infrared-image of the angle display is transmitted to a screen outside of the cabin, ensuring that the patient's SVV estimates can be collected continuously without having to open the cabin door between tests, therefore preventing visual re-orientation.

3. Calibration under visual control

  1. Tilt the light bar 30° to the right or left relative to the absolute vertical (which serves as start position before each SVV task) and ask the patient to adjust it to the vertical position under visual control. This serves to self-calibrate the patient and to check the visuomotor ability of the patient.
  2. If the patient confirms the displayed SVV position, compare it with the actual vertical.
  3. If the patient's setting deviates significantly from the actual vertical, check the orthograde position of the SVV unit again. A deviation of ±1° is tolerable to confirm intact visuomotor function.

4. SVV setting in neutral head position

  1. Open the examination protocol for simultaneous entry of the SVV estimates. The protocol allows the documentation of the measurements during the experiment and randomly determines whether the SVV task is performed from the +30° or -30° starting position.
  2. Close the cabin door so that the patient is in complete darkness throughout the experiment. Check by intercom if the patient can understand the instructions well. Ask the patient now to tilt the light bar in the starting position: 30° to the right or to the left (randomization according to the protocol, Figure 1d).
  3. After a waiting period of 15 s, instruct the patient to adjust the lightbar from the starting position until it reaches the subjective vertical. The patient is not under time pressure and can still correct the set position at any time. The patient confirms the setting verbally via the intercom system.
  4. Enter the tilt angle shown on the display in degrees in the protocol. Per definition, mark clockwise angle deviations with a plus, while mark counterclockwise deviations with a minus. In total, let the patient adjust the SVV in 6 passes, whereby the starting position of ±30° is randomized.
  5. After completion of the trial in neutral head position, perform the test with head tilting in the roll plane. The tilt direction sequence (-30°, -15°, +15° and +30°) is also randomized for each patient.

5. SVV setting with head tilt

  1. Undo the initial head fixation by disconnecting the adhesive straps.
  2. Loosen the headrest and adapt the tilt position according to the protocol: 15° or 30° to the right or to the left. Make sure that the headrest is exactly aligned along the respective angle at the goniometer, which is attached to the chair's backrest. Fix the headrest in this position firmly.
  3. Fix the patient's head with the elastic headband to the headrest. Ensure that this head tilt is tolerable for the patient and adapt the height of the headrest if needed. Instruct the patient to maintain this head position during the trial.
  4. Close the cabin door and perform the trial as in the neutral head position.
  5. Upon completion of the trial, undo the head restraint and adjust the headrest according to the randomized head-tilt position given by the protocol.
  6. Close the cabin door again and perform the same procedures until all SVV settings in all head tilts have been recorded.

Wyniki

SVV assessment was performed using a rotational chair system (Figure 1a) comprising a tiltable headrest and an adjustable LED light bar. The SVV adjustments were recorded via an infrared camera from a goniometer display on the back of the lightbar (Figure 1b). The devices used and the test protocol correspond exactly to the test methods presented here.

SVV measurement was performed in 13 healthy individuals at a mean age of 52.8 years...

Dyskusje

SVV is a method to ensure the sense of verticality. It results from the integration of several information. The vestibular system being of paramount importance in this perception, it has been shown that a lesion at any level of vestibular information pathway leads to SVV errors.

The measurement of SVV in the head upright position is now regarded as the clinical standard method for recording otolith function. However, this method is hampered by low sensitivity as SVV-deviations in darkness in h...

Ujawnienia

The authors have nothing to disclose.

Podziękowania

The authors have no acknowledgements.

Materiały

NameCompanyCatalog NumberComments
Adjustable plastic goniometer board 7,87" x 7,87", (marked tilt angles of 0°, 15° and 30° )self-produced6for fixation at the backrest and for adjustment of neckrest along the given tilt angles (0°,15°,30°)
Elastic head band with adjustable screw on the backMicromedical Technologies Inc4modified with attached adhesive strap
HD LCD display, 1366 x 768p resolution, 19"Philips5for monitoring SVV-adjustments outside the cabin (infrared camera recording)
Subjective Visual Vertical Set including infrared video camera (black/white, resolution 0,25°)Micromedical Technologies Inc2
Sytem 2000 (Rotational Vestibular Chair System with Centrifuge)Micromedical Technologies Inc., 10 Kemp Dr., Chatham, IL 62629-9769 United States1
Tiltable headrest Micromedical Technologies Inc3modified with attached adhesive strap

Odniesienia

  1. Dieterich, M., Brandt, T. Perception of Verticality and Vestibular Disorders of Balance and Falls. Frontiers in Neurology. 10, 172 (2019).
  2. Elwischger, K., Rommer, P., Prayer, D., Mueller, C., Auff, E., Wiest, G. Thalamic astasia from isolated centromedian thalamic infarction. Neurology. 78 (2), 146-147 (2012).
  3. Wiest, G., Zimprich, F., Prayer, D., Czech, T., Serles, W., Baumgartner, C. Vestibular processing in human paramedian precuneus as shown by electrical cortical stimulation. Neurology. 62 (3), 473-475 (2004).
  4. Wiest, G., Tian, J. R., Baloh, R. W., Crane, B. T., Demer, J. L. Otolith function in cerebellar ataxia due to mutations in the calcium channel gene CACNA1A. Brain. 124, 2407-2416 (2001).
  5. Dakin, C. J., Rosenberg, A. Gravity estimation and verticality perception. Handbook of Clinical Neurology. 159, 43-59 (2018).
  6. Demer, J. L., Crane, B. T., Tian, J. R., Wiest, G. New tests of vestibular function. Annals of the New Yorc Academy of Science. 942, 428-445 (2001).
  7. Clarke, A. H., Schonfeld, U., Helling, K. Unilateral examination of utricle and saccule function. Journal of Vestibular Research. 13 (4-6), 215-225 (2003).
  8. Kingma, H. Clinical testing of the statolith-ocular reflex. ORL Journal for Otorhinolaryngology and its Related Specialties. 59 (4), 198-208 (1997).
  9. Bisdorff, A. R., Wolsley, C. J., Anastasopoulus, D., Bronstein, A. M., Gresty, M. A. The perception of body verticality (subjective postural vertical) in peripheral and central vestibulardisorders. Brain. 199 (5), 1523-1534 (1996).
  10. Welgampola, M. S., Colebatch, J. G. Characteristics and clinical applications of vestibular-evoked myogenic potentials. Neurology. 64 (10), 1682-1688 (2005).
  11. Kingma, H. Function tests of the otolith or statolith system. Current Opinion in Neurology. 19 (1), 21-25 (2006).
  12. Kheradmand, A., Winnick, A. Perception of Upright: Multisensory Convergence and the Role of Temporo-Parietal Cortex. Frontiers in Neurology. 8, 552 (2017).
  13. Zwergal, A., Rettinger, N., Frenzel, C., Dieterich, M., Brandt, T., Strupp, M. A bucket of static vestibular function. Neurology. 72 (19), 1689-1692 (2009).
  14. Bronstein, A. M. The Interaction of Otolith and Proprioceptive Information in the Perception of Verticality: The Effects of Labyrinthine and CNS Disease. Annals of the New York Academy of Science. 871, 324-333 (1999).
  15. Saeys, W., Herssens, N., Verwulgen, S., Truijen, S. Sensory information and the perception of verticality in post-stroke patients. Another point of view in sensory reweighting strategies. PLOS ONE. 13 (6), 0199098 (2018).
  16. Baier, B., Thömke, F., Wilting, J., Heinze, C., Geber, C., Dieterich, M. A pathway in the brainstem for roll-tilt of the subjective visual vertical: evidence from a lesion-behavior mapping study. Journal of Neuroscience. 32 (43), 14854-14858 (2012).
  17. Huh, Y. E., Kim, K., Chung, W., Youn, J., Kim, S., Cho, J. W. Pisa Syndrome in Parkinson's Disease: Pathogenic Roles of Verticality Perception Deficits. Science Reports. 8 (1), 1804 (2018).
  18. Ogawa, Y., Otsuka, K., Shimizu, S., Inagaki, T., Kondo, T., Suzuki, M. Subjective visual vertical perception in patients with vestibular neuritis and sudden sensorineural hearing loss. Journal of Vestibular Research. 22 (4), 205-211 (2012).
  19. Toupet, M., Van Nechel, C., Bozorg, A., Grayeli, Influence of body laterality on recovery from subjective visual vertical tilt after vestibular neuritis. Audiology and Neurootology. 19 (4), 248-255 (2014).
  20. Lopez, C., Lacour, M., Ahmadi, A. E., Magnan, J., Borel, L. Changes of visual vertical perception: a long-term sign of unilateral and bilateral vestibular loss. Neuropsychologia. 45 (9), 2025-2037 (2007).
  21. Kitahara, T., et al. Idiopathic benign paroxysmal positional vertigo with persistent vertigo/dizziness sensation is associated with latent canal paresis, endolymphatic hydrops, and osteoporosis. Auris Nasus Larynx. 46 (1), 27-33 (2019).
  22. Platho-Elwischger, K., et al. Plasticity of static graviceptive function in patients with cervical dystonia. Journal of the Neurological Sciences. 373, 230-235 (2017).
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  24. Guerraz, M., Luyat, M., Poquin, D., Ohlmann, T. The role of neck afferents in subjective orientation in the visual and tactile sensory modalities. Acta Otolaryngologica. 120 (6), 735-738 (2000).
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