Increased Perception of Head Tilt to Galvanic Vestibular Stimulation Correlates to Motion Sickness Susceptibility in Vestibular Migraine.

IF 1 4区 医学 Q3 AUDIOLOGY & SPEECH-LANGUAGE PATHOLOGY Journal of the American Academy of Audiology Pub Date : 2024-10-02 DOI:10.1055/s-0044-1790263
Mitesh Patel
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Abstract

Background:  Vestibular migraine is associated with vertigo, persistent swaying, tilting, and disorientation, which suggests a heightened sensitivity of the neural mechanisms subserving spatial orientation. Whether a heightened sense of motion to vestibular stimulation in vestibular migraine is associated with sensitivity to visual motion (visual dependency) or physical motion (motion sickness susceptibility) is unclear.

Purpose:  The aim of this study was to explore whether a heightened sense of self-motion sensitivity in vestibular migraine is associated with visual dependency or motion sickness susceptibility.

Study design:  This is a prospective cross-over study.

Study sample:  Fifteen participants with vestibular migraine and 20 healthy controls (all right handed) were included in this study.

Data collection and analysis:  In the main experiment, participants were asked to align a rod to the perceived head position. Head tilt was generated by DC galvanic vestibular stimulation at 1 mA to produce head tilts to the right (left anodal/right cathodal stimulation, LA/RC) or left (right anodal/left cathodal, RA/LC). The perception of head tilt was measured in a dark room using laptop software that allowed participants to turn an illuminated rod to any angle about the midpoint. Participants were instructed to align the rod to the perceived head position before and during galvanic stimulation and the line angle was saved. Head position was objectively monitored with an ultrasound motion system. After completing the perceptual test, visual dependency was measured with a static and rotating background and the Motion Sickness Susceptibility Questionnaire (MSSQ) was completed.

Results:  In an upright head position, without stimulation, the perceived head position was 1.1 degrees in controls and -0.69 degrees in vestibular migraine participants with no significant difference between groups. During galvanic vestibular stimulation, participants with vestibular migraine had an increased perception of head tilt compared with controls (RA/LC: controls -4.7 degrees and vestibular migraine -9.29, p = 0.002; and LA/RC: controls 6.5 degrees and vestibular migraine 11.12 degrees, p = 0.017), although the size of head movement was similar between groups. The average perception of head tilt correlated to the MSSQ score, but not to the degree of visual dependency in a static or moving background.

Conclusion:  A heightened sensitivity of the vestibular system to vestibular stimulation in vestibular migraine is consistent with reports of self-motion sensitivity in vestibular migraine.

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前庭性偏头痛患者对伽马能前庭刺激的头部倾斜感知增加与晕动病易感性相关。
背景:前庭性偏头痛与眩晕、持续摇摆、倾斜和迷失方向有关,这表明维持空间定向的神经机制的敏感性增强。前庭性偏头痛患者对前庭刺激的运动感增强是否与对视觉运动(视觉依赖)或物理运动(晕动病易感性)的敏感性有关,目前尚不清楚。研究目的:本研究旨在探讨前庭性偏头痛患者自我运动敏感性增强是否与视觉依赖或晕动病易感性有关:研究样本:研究样本:15 名前庭性偏头痛患者和 20 名健康对照者(均为右手):在主要实验中,参与者被要求将一根杆对准感知到的头部位置。头部倾斜是通过 1 毫安直流电振前庭刺激产生的,以产生头部向右倾斜(左阳极/右阴极刺激,LA/RC)或向左倾斜(右阳极/左阴极刺激,RA/LC)。头部倾斜的感知是在暗室中使用笔记本电脑软件进行测量的,该软件允许受试者将照明棒转到中点的任意角度。在电刺激前和电刺激过程中,要求参与者将杆对准感知到的头部位置,并保存线角。头部位置通过超声波运动系统进行客观监测。完成感知测试后,在静态和旋转背景下测量视觉依赖性,并填写晕动病易感性问卷(MSSQ):结果:在头部直立、无刺激的情况下,对照组的感知头部位置为 1.1 度,而前庭性偏头痛患者的感知头部位置为-0.69 度,组间无显著差异。在电刺激前庭时,与对照组相比,前庭性偏头痛患者对头部倾斜的感知增加(RA/LC:对照组-4.7度,前庭性偏头痛-9.29度,p = 0.002;LA/RC:对照组6.5度,前庭性偏头痛11.12度,p = 0.017),但各组间头部移动的幅度相似。头部倾斜的平均感知与 MSSQ 评分相关,但与静态或动态背景下的视觉依赖程度无关:结论:前庭性偏头痛患者的前庭系统对前庭刺激的敏感性增强,这与有关前庭性偏头痛患者自我运动敏感性的报道一致。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
46
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: The Journal of the American Academy of Audiology (JAAA) is the Academy''s scholarly peer-reviewed publication, issued 10 times per year and available to Academy members as a benefit of membership. The JAAA publishes articles and clinical reports in all areas of audiology, including audiological assessment, amplification, aural habilitation and rehabilitation, auditory electrophysiology, vestibular assessment, and hearing science.
期刊最新文献
Relationship between Location of Focal Traumatic Brain Injury and Canal Involved in Benign Paroxysmal Positional Vertigo. The Effect of COVID-19 on the Efferent Auditory System in Adults. Increased Perception of Head Tilt to Galvanic Vestibular Stimulation Correlates to Motion Sickness Susceptibility in Vestibular Migraine. A Comparison of Ocular Vestibular Evoked Myogenic Potentials via Audiometric and Nonaudiometric Bone Vibrators. Comparison of Multifrequency Narrow-Band CE-Chirp and Tone Burst Evoked Cervical Vestibular Evoked Myogenic Potentials.
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