自动头部运动系统提高了可靠性,减少了操作者对前庭反射头部脉冲测试的依赖。

Grace X Tan, Desi P Schoo, Charles C Della Santina, Mehdi A Rahman, Nicolas S Valentin Contreras, Chen-Hsin Sun, Bryce Chiang
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引用次数: 3

摘要

眼球稳定前庭-眼反射(VOR)的缺乏是多种前庭迷路疾病的一个显著特征,前庭迷路包括内耳的头部旋转、平移和定向传感器。通过观察和测量头部运动期间和之后的眼球运动,有助于诊断这些疾病。视频头脉冲测试最近引起了人们对前庭功能障碍的临床诊断评估的兴趣。在典型的实践中,它包括使用视频眼视镜来测量眼球运动,而临床医师考官抓住受试者的头部,并手动将其向左或向右旋转,以足够的加速度在约150毫秒内旋转约20度,在运动过程中达到>120度/秒的峰值速度。手动传送头部脉冲会导致每次测试、每次测试期间和操作人员之间的差异,从而降低测试的可靠性、效率、安全性和标准化。我们描述了一种新颖,紧凑和便携式的自动头部脉冲测试(aHIT™)设备的应用,该设备提供高度可重复的头部运动刺激,其轴平行于前庭迷宫的六个半规管,具有可编程的高斯和正弦运动曲线,其振幅,速度和加速度足以在光谱范围内测试VOR功能,其中VOR在其他视觉稳定反射中占主导地位。我们在人类受试者身上测试了aHIT™,并证明了与手动传递头部脉冲相比,其高再现性。该装置有潜力成为一个有价值的临床和研究工具,用于前庭系统的诊断评估和调查。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

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Automated head motion system improves reliability and lessens operator dependence for head impulse testing of vestibular reflexes.

Deficiency of the eye-stabilizing vestibulo-ocular reflex (VOR) is a defining feature in multiple diseases of the vestibular labyrinth, which comprises the inner ear's sensors of head rotation, translation and orientation. Diagnosis of these disorders is facilitated by observation and measurement of eye movements during and after head motion. The video head impulse test has recently garnered interest as a clinical diagnostic assessment of vestibular dysfunction. In typical practice, it involves use of video-oculography goggles to measure eye movements while a clinician examiner grasps the subject's head and manually rotates it left or right at sufficient acceleration to cover ~20 deg over ~150 mS, reaching a peak velocity of >120 deg/S midway through the movement. Manual delivery of head impulses incurs significant trial-by-trial, inter-session and inter-operator variability, which lessens the test's reliability, efficiency, safety and standardization across testing facilities. We describe application of a novel, compact and portable automated head impulse test (aHIT™) device that delivers highly repeatable head motion stimuli about axes parallel to those of the vestibular labyrinth's six semicircular canals, with programmable Gaussian and sinusoidal motion profiles at amplitudes, velocities and accelerations sufficient to test VOR function over the spectral range for which the VOR dominates other vision-stabilizing reflexes. We tested the aHIT™ on human subjects and demonstrated its high reproducibility compared to manually delivered head impulses. This device has the potential to be a valuable clinical and research tool for diagnostic evaluation and investigation of the vestibular system.

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