Assessing Otolith Function by the Subjective Visual Vertical

: The effects of peripheral vestibular diseases on the subjective visual vertical (SVV) are resumed and provide the basis for some insights into the otolith pathophysiology. With a normal range of 0 ± 2 deg (when measured in an upright body position), the SVV was shifted by 11 ± 6 deg toward the ips...

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Veröffentlicht in:Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences 1999-05, Vol.871 (1), p.221-231
Hauptverfasser: BÖHMER, ANDREAS, MAST, FRED
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creator BÖHMER, ANDREAS
MAST, FRED
description : The effects of peripheral vestibular diseases on the subjective visual vertical (SVV) are resumed and provide the basis for some insights into the otolith pathophysiology. With a normal range of 0 ± 2 deg (when measured in an upright body position), the SVV was shifted by 11 ± 6 deg toward the ipsilateral ear in 40 patients following an acute unilateral vestibular deafferentiation (UVD), but in the opposite direction in 9 of 52 patients after stapes surgery. These opposite effects suggest a push‐pull mechanism of the pairs of otolith organs with respect to the SVV. The dissociation between the SVV and the perception of body position indicates influences by unconscious reflexive mechanisms such as ocular cyclotorsion on the SVV. In chronic UVD patients, lateral shifts of the subjects during constant angular velocity rotation into various eccentric positions (± 16 cm) revealed a shift of the “center of graviception” close to the remaining intact contralateral inner ear. To date, this seems to be the most consistent test for clinical identification of a chronic compensated unilateral loss of otolith function. The findings regarding asymmetries in otolithic sensitivity to medially and laterally directed roll‐tilts remain controversial, probably mainly because of influences of extravestibular cues.
doi_str_mv 10.1111/j.1749-6632.1999.tb09187.x
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subjects Afferent Pathways - physiopathology
Denervation
Ear, Inner - physiopathology
Functional Laterality - physiology
Gravity Sensing - physiology
Humans
Motion Perception - physiology
Otolithic Membrane - physiopathology
Posture - physiology
Reflex - physiology
Space life sciences
Vestibular Diseases - physiopathology
Vestibular Nerve - physiopathology
Visual Perception - physiology
title Assessing Otolith Function by the Subjective Visual Vertical
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