Literature DB >> 17575279

Evidence for cortical visual substitution of chronic bilateral vestibular failure (an fMRI study).

Marianne Dieterich1, Thomas Bauermann, Christoph Best, Peter Stoeter, Peter Schlindwein.   

Abstract

Bilateral vestibular failure (BVF) is a rare disorder of the labyrinth or the eighth cranial nerve which has various aetiologies. BVF patients suffer from unsteadiness of gait combined with blurred vision due to oscillopsia. Functional MRI (fMRI) in healthy subjects has shown that stimulation of the visual system induces an activation of the visual cortex and ocular motor areas bilaterally as well as simultaneous deactivations of multisensory vestibular cortex areas. Our question was whether the chronic absence of bilateral vestibular input (BVF) causes a plastic cortical reorganization of the above-described visual-vestibular interaction. We used fMRI to measure the differential effects of horizontal visual optokinetic stimulation (OKN) on activations and deactivations in 10 patients with BVF and compared their data directly to those of pairwise age- and sex-matched controls. We found that bilateral activation of the primary visual cortex (inferior and middle occipital gyri, Brodmann area BA 17, 18, 19), the motion-sensitive areas V5 in the middle and inferior temporal gyri (BA 37), and the frontal eye field (BA 8), the right paracentral and superior parietal lobule and the right fusiform and parahippocampal gyri was significantly stronger and the activation clusters were larger than that of the age-matched healthy controls. Small areas of BOLD signal decreases (deactivations), located primarily in the right posterior insula containing the parieto-insular vestibular cortex, were similar to those in the healthy controls. No other sensory brain areas showed unexpected activations or deactivations, e.g. the somatosensory or auditory cortex areas. Our finding of enhanced activations within the visual and ocular motor systems of BVF patients suggests that they might be correlated with an upregulation of visual sensitivity during tracking of visual motion patterns. Functionally, these enhanced activations are independent of optokinetic performance, since the mean slow-phase velocity of OKN in the BVF patients did not differ from that in normals. Although psychophysical and neurophysiological tests have provided various examples of how sensory loss in one modality leads to a substitutional increase of functional sensitivity in other modalities, this study presents the first evidence of visual substitution for vestibular loss by functional imaging.

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Mesh:

Year:  2007        PMID: 17575279     DOI: 10.1093/brain/awm130

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Brain        ISSN: 0006-8950            Impact factor:   13.501


  41 in total

1.  Electrical tongue stimulation normalizes activity within the motion-sensitive brain network in balance-impaired subjects as revealed by group independent component analysis.

Authors:  Joseph C Wildenberg; Mitchell E Tyler; Yuri P Danilov; Kurt A Kaczmarek; Mary E Meyerand
Journal:  Brain Connect       Date:  2011-09-12

2.  Sustained cortical and subcortical neuromodulation induced by electrical tongue stimulation.

Authors:  Joseph C Wildenberg; Mitchell E Tyler; Yuri P Danilov; Kurt A Kaczmarek; Mary E Meyerand
Journal:  Brain Imaging Behav       Date:  2010-12       Impact factor: 3.978

3.  Modulation of central nystagmus by vision, proprioception, and efference copy signals: a systematic evaluation.

Authors:  Jeong-Yoon Choi; Ji-Soo Kim
Journal:  J Neurol       Date:  2016-02-12       Impact factor: 4.849

4.  High-resolution fMRI detects neuromodulation of individual brainstem nuclei by electrical tongue stimulation in balance-impaired individuals.

Authors:  Joseph C Wildenberg; Mitchell E Tyler; Yuri P Danilov; Kurt A Kaczmarek; Mary E Meyerand
Journal:  Neuroimage       Date:  2011-04-08       Impact factor: 6.556

5.  Hippocampal gray matter volume in bilateral vestibular failure.

Authors:  Martin Göttlich; Nico M Jandl; Andreas Sprenger; Jann F Wojak; Thomas F Münte; Ulrike M Krämer; Christoph Helmchen
Journal:  Hum Brain Mapp       Date:  2016-02-26       Impact factor: 5.038

6.  Cognitive deficits in patients with a chronic vestibular failure.

Authors:  Pauline Popp; Melanie Wulff; Kathrin Finke; Maxine Rühl; Thomas Brandt; Marianne Dieterich
Journal:  J Neurol       Date:  2017-01-10       Impact factor: 4.849

7.  Sensory convergence in the parieto-insular vestibular cortex.

Authors:  Michael E Shinder; Shawn D Newlands
Journal:  J Neurophysiol       Date:  2014-03-26       Impact factor: 2.714

8.  Connectivity of the human insula: A cortico-cortical evoked potential (CCEP) study.

Authors:  Sasha Dionisio; Lazarus Mayoglou; Sung-Min Cho; David Prime; Patrick M Flanigan; Bradley Lega; John Mosher; Richard Leahy; Jorge Gonzalez-Martinez; Dileep Nair
Journal:  Cortex       Date:  2019-06-18       Impact factor: 4.027

Review 9.  Sensorimotor training in virtual reality: a review.

Authors:  Sergei V Adamovich; Gerard G Fluet; Eugene Tunik; Alma S Merians
Journal:  NeuroRehabilitation       Date:  2009       Impact factor: 2.138

10.  Perfusion imaging in Pusher syndrome to investigate the neural substrates involved in controlling upright body position.

Authors:  Luca Francesco Ticini; Uwe Klose; Thomas Nägele; Hans-Otto Karnath
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2009-05-29       Impact factor: 3.240

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