Neurophysiology of Vestibular Compensation
Neurophysiology of Vestibular Compensation
- 한국청각언어재활학회
- Audiology and Speech Research
- Audiology and Speech Research 제19권 제1호
- : SCOPUS, KCI등재
- 2023.01
- 1 - 16 (16 pages)
Vestibular compensation is the process by which patients achieve functional recovery after vestibular lesions, and can be divided into static compensation and dynamic compensation. The first stage, static static compensation, consists of eliminating static symptoms (i.e., spontaneous nystagmus and skew deviation) by rebalancing the tonic neural activity in the vestibular nuclei. The second stage, dynamic compensation is much more subtle, takes longer, and involves a central recalibration of the response properties of the vestibulo-ocular reflex (VOR) (i.e., timing and gain) in order to restore the compensatory actions of the VOR to pre-impairment levels. This review is to introduce the normal vestibular function in humans to understand the neurophysiology of vestibular compensation after vestibular lesions, and to review the effects of various types of lesions and the clinical findings in various stages of compensation after each type of lesion. Vestibular compensation is most effective for unilateral vestibular dysfunctions in which tonic neural activity of the vestibular nucleus is rebalanced to achieve static compensation. Adaptive changes in tonic neural activity occur in the normal vestibular pathways to achieve dynamic compensation. In other types of vestibular lesions, vestibular compensation is possible, but not as effective.
INTRODUCTION
Vesti bular re spon ses to different types of head movements
Effect s of acute unilateral vestibular lesions
Effect s of acute bilateral vestibular lesions
Effect s of acute central vestibular lesions
Neural basis of vestibular compensation
Compensation after unilateral vestibular lesion
Prior to the onset of lesion
Immediately after the onset of lesion
Cerebellar clamping stage
Neural activity at the vestibular nuclei of the affected side
Static compensation
Dynamic compensation
Compensation after vertical canal and otolithlesions
Compensation after bilateral vestibular lesions
Compensation after central vestibular lesions
CONCLUSIONS
REFERENCES