| Literature DB >> 28337171 |
Georges Dumas1, Ian S Curthoys2, Alexis Lion3, Philippe Perrin4, Sébastien Schmerber5.
Abstract
A 100-Hz bone-conducted vibration applied to either mastoid induces instantaneously a predominantly horizontal nystagmus, with quick phases beating away from the affected side in patients with a unilateral vestibular loss (UVL). The same stimulus in healthy asymptomatic subjects has little or no effect. This is skull vibration-induced nystagmus (SVIN), and it is a useful, simple, non-invasive, robust indicator of asymmetry of vestibular function and the side of the vestibular loss. The nystagmus is precisely stimulus-locked: it starts with stimulation onset and stops at stimulation offset, with no post-stimulation reversal. It is sustained during long stimulus durations; it is reproducible; it beats in the same direction irrespective of which mastoid is stimulated; it shows little or no habituation; and it is permanent-even well-compensated UVL patients show SVIN. A SVIN is observed under Frenzel goggles or videonystagmoscopy and recorded under videonystagmography in absence of visual-fixation and strong sedative drugs. Stimulus frequency, location, and intensity modify the results, and a large variability in skull morphology between people can modify the stimulus. SVIN to 100 Hz mastoid stimulation is a robust response. We describe the optimum method of stimulation on the basis of the literature data and testing more than 18,500 patients. Recent neural evidence clarifies which vestibular receptors are stimulated, how they cause the nystagmus, and why the same vibration in patients with semicircular canal dehiscence (SCD) causes a nystagmus beating toward the affected ear. This review focuses not only on the optimal parameters of the stimulus and response of UVL and SCD patients but also shows how other vestibular dysfunctions affect SVIN. We conclude that the presence of SVIN is a useful indicator of the asymmetry of vestibular function between the two ears, but in order to identify which is the affected ear, other information and careful clinical judgment are needed.Entities:
Keywords: high frequencies; nystagmus; skull vibration; vertigo; vestibular disease
Year: 2017 PMID: 28337171 PMCID: PMC5343042 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2017.00041
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.003
Synoptic table of results in literature.
| Reference | Level of evidence | Study design | Sample size ( | Pathology | Record | Stimulus location | Stimulus frequency Hz (amplitude mm) | Main contribution, comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lücke 1973 ( | 3 | RCS | 65 | Unilateral vestibular loss (UVL) patients, central patients | Frenzel | Face cranium vertex necknape | 100 | First incidental observation of a vibration-induced nystagmus (VIN) in a UVL patient |
| Lackner and Graybiel 1974 ( | 2 | PCS | 6 | Normal subjects | Frenzel | Face, mastoids, cervical | 40–280 optimal 120–180 | Vibrations induce postural, visual illusions, rare VIN in normal subjects |
| Yagi and Ohyama 1996 ( | 3 | PCS | 11 | UVL | VNG3D | Dorsal neck muscles | 115 (1 mm) | Vibrations induce in UVL compensated patients a VIN (Hor and Vert components) related to vestibular decompensation |
| Strupp et al. 1998 ( | 2 | PCS | 25 | VN | VNG, SVSA | Neck muscles | 100 | Somatosensory substitution of vestibular function in UVL patients |
| 25 | Controls | |||||||
| Popov et al. 1999 ( | 2 | PCS | 4 | UVL | Scleral, coils, visual illusions | Neck vibration | 90 (0.5 mm) | Propriogyral illusion secondary to vibration-induced eye movement (COR) |
| 5 | Controls | |||||||
| Hamann and Schuster 1999 ( | 3 | RCS | 60 | Peripheral UVL benign positional paroxystic vertigo | VNS VNG2D | Mastoid | 60, 100 | In UVL, a lesionnal VIN is observed in peripheral diseases and seldom in BPPV and in central patients. Optimal stim 60 Hz |
| 40 | BSL | |||||||
| Dumas et al. 1999 ( | 3 | RCS | 80 | UVL: TUVL (TA, VNT) PUVL (MD, VN, VS) | VNS, VNG3D | Mastoid, vertex | 100 (0.2 mm) | VIN: 3 components in TUVL. VIN characteristics, technical conditions, sensitivity, specificity |
| 10 | BSL | |||||||
| 100 | Controls | |||||||
| Dumas et al. 2000 ( | 3 | RCS | 46 | UVL | VNS, VNG3D | Mastoid, vertex | 20–150 (0.2 mm) | VIN SPV amplitude; location and frequency stimulus optimization. A vestibular Weber test |
| 105 | Controls | |||||||
| Karlberg et al. 2003 ( | 3 | PCS | 18 | UVL (VN, VNT) | Scleral Coils, SVH | Mastoid, posterior neck | 92 (0.6 mm) | SVH shift is explained by vibration-induced ocular torsion whose magnitude is related to the extent of UVL deficit |
| Ohki et al. 2003 ( | 3 | RCS | 100 | UVL (VN, MD, VS) | VNG | Mastoid, forehead | 100 | In UVL patients VIN is correlated with CaT hypofunction |
| Nuti and Mandala 2005 ( | 3 | RCS | 28 | VN | VNG | Mastoid | 60–120 | Sensitivity 75%, specificity 100% VIN beats usually toward the intact side |
| 25 | Controls | |||||||
| Magnusson et al. 2006 ( | 2 | PCS | 10 | Normal subjects | Posture | Mastoid, neck | 85 (1 mm) 55 (0.4 mm) | Cervical muscle afferents play a dominant role over vestibular afferents during bilateral vibration of the neck |
| Dumas et al. 2007 ( | 3 | RCS | 4,800 | TUVL, PUVL, brainstem lesion | VNS, VNG | Mastoid, vertex | 100 (1 mm) | VIN is observed in 98% TUVL,75% PUVL, 34% BSL |
| Hong et al. 2007 ( | 3 | RCS | 52 | MD Unilat | VNS, VNG, head-shaking-nystagmus (HSN), CaT | Mastoid | 100 | VIN is usually correlated with CaT hypofunction. VIN beats frequently ipsilaterally toward MD side |
| White et al. 2007 ( | 3 | RCS | 8 | SCD | VNS, VNG 2D | Mastoid, vertex, suboccip. | 100 | Vibrations induce a torsional VIN beating toward the SCD and down beating suggesting the stimulation of the dehiscent SSCC |
| Dumas et al. 2008 ( | 3 | RCS | 131 | TUVL (TA, VNT) | VNS, VNG 2D 3D | Mastoid, vertex | 100 (1 mm) | VIN: 3 components (H,V,T), SVINT: a bilateral stimulation, sensitivity 98%, specificity 94%, SPV:10.7°/s; SD = 7.5, VIN is always beating toward the intact side |
| 95 | Controls | |||||||
| Manzari et al. 2008 ( | 3 | RCS | 16 | SCD | VNG3D | Mastoid | 100 | Vibrations induce a VIN with a torsional component beating toward the lesion side |
| Park et al. 2008 ( | 3 | RCS | 19 | VN | VNG | Mastoid | 100 | Clinical significance of VIN |
| 22 | Controls | |||||||
| Park et al. 2010 ( | 2 | PCS | 26 | VN | VNG | Mastoid | 100 | VIN clinical significance, reliability |
| Aw et al. 2011 ( | 3 | RCS | 17 | SCD | Scleral coils | Mastoid | 500 | Eye slow torsional component ViVOR is directed toward the intact side: vibrations stimulate the anterior dehiscent canal |
| Dumas et al. 2011 ( | 3 | RCS | 99 | PUVL (VN, VS, MD, CL) | VNG 2D | Mastoid, vertex | 30, 60, 100 (1 mm) | Sensitivity 75%. VIN beats toward safe side in 91%. skull vibration-induced nystagmus test complements CaT, HST in vestibular multifrequential analysis |
| Kawase 2011 ( | 3 | RCS | 14 | 7 pre-surgical VS, 7 post-surgical VS | VNG, SVV | Neck muscles | 110 | Ipsilat. vibrations increase SVV deviation, VIN is correlated to SVV alteration, VIN is not modified by the side of the stimulation |
| Koo et al. 2011 ( | 3 | RCS | 74 | VS | VNG | Mastoid | 100 | Comparison of sensitivity of VIN and other vestibular tests in the YAW axis in VN. VIN is observed in 86% of cases in correlation with CaT Hypofunction. VIN beats toward the intact side in 98% |
| 24 | Controls | HST CaT | ||||||
| Dumas et al. 2013 ( | 2 | RCS | 9 | Profound compensated long-standing UVL | VNG 2D, posturog | Mastoid, vertex | 100 | VIN beats toward the intact side in 100% of cases, No measurable postural changes in EC condition in long standing compensated severe UVL patients |
| 12 | Control | |||||||
| Xie et al. 2013 ( | 3 | RCS | 112 | UVL | VNG, HST CaT | Mastoids | 100 | VIN is observed in 91% of peripheral UVL. It is more frequent and important when CaT canal paresis augments. VIN usually beats toward the healthy side except in MD |
| 30 | Controls | |||||||
| Dumas et al. 2014 ( | 3 | RCS | 17 | SCD (unilateral) | VNG 3D, cVEMP, CaT, VHIT | Mastoid, vertex | 60,100 (1 mm) | In Unilat SCD, a VIN is observed in 86% cases. Horizotal and Torsional components beat toward lesion side. The VIN vert. component is most often up beating. Higher responses are obtained on vertex location |
| 12 | Control | |||||||
| Park et al. 2014 ( | 3 | RCS | 11 | SCD | Mastoid | 100 | VIN horizontal component beats toward the lesion side | |
| Lee et al. 2015 ( | 3 | RCS | 87 | MD | VNG | Mastoid | 100 | In MD, VIN and HSN are not always in the same direction |
| Front | ||||||||
| Dumas et al. 2016 ( | 2 | PCS | 11 | Normal subjects | Piezoelectric sensor | Mastoid; vertex; neck | 100 | Vibration transfer is more efficient from one mastoid to the other one |
RCS, Retrospective Clinical Study; PCS; Prospective Clinical Study; TUVL, total unilateral vestibular lesion; PUVL, partial unilateral vestibular lesion; VN, vestibular neuritis; MD, Meniere’s disease; VS, vestibular Schwannoma; CL, chemical labyrinthectomy (Gentamicin); SCD, superior semicircular canal dehiscence; TA, translabyrinthine approach (for VS surgery); VNT, vestibular neurotomy; BSL, brainstem lesion; VNG, videonystagmography; VNS, videonystagmoscopy; 3D, 3-dimensional study of the nystagmus; 2D, 2-dimensional study; SSC, scleral searching coils; SVV, subjective visual vertical; SVH, subjective visual horizontal; SVSA, subjective visual straight ahead; CaT, caloric test; cVEMP, cervical evoked myogenic potentials; VIN, vibration induced nystagmus; HSN, head shaking nystagmus; COR, cervico–ocular reflex; EC, eye closed.
Figure 1Skull vibration-induced nystagmus test technique in clinical practice. (A) Principle of stimulation: the examiner can face the subject, as in the first example. The vibrator cylindrical contact is applied perpendicularly to the designated surface (red spot) with a pressure of about 10 N or 1 kg on the vertex or each mastoid process [level to the external acoustic meatus (Green spot)]. The examiner uses the other hand to maintain and immobilize the subject’s head. The same type of stimulation can be performed with the examiner behind the subject (second example situation). Stimulation must avoid the mastoid tip to prevent from muscular vibration radiation and proprioceptive involvement. (B) Mastoid stimulation; examiner in front of the subject; the other hand immobilizes the head. 3F Synapsys stimulator (France). Videonystagmoscopic recording (Collin ORL, France).
Figure 2Topographic optimization analysis of the skull vibration-induced nystagmus test. (A) Procedure. (B) Results: the piezoelectric potentials (millivolts) recorded on the mastoid are significantly different according to the location of the stimulation (Friedman test, P < 0.001): the values obtained during the vibratory stimulation of the contralateral mastoid are higher than those obtained after vertex or ipsilateral and contralateral posterior cervical muscle vibrations (Wilcoxon tests, P < 0.001). No difference is observed between vertex and posterior cervical muscle stimulation locations (Wilcoxon tests, P > 0.05). The piezoelectric potentials recorded on the vertex or the posterior cervical muscles are not different according to the location of the stimulation (Friedman test and Wilcoxon test, P > 0.05).
Figure 3Example of 3D recordings in a total unilateral vestibular lesion—vibration-induced nystagmus (VIN) onset and offset. Left total unilateral vestibular loss 3D recording (translabyrinthine surgery performed 10 years ago) for vestibular schwannoma. The recordings are successively performed on the right mastoid (RM), the left mastoid (LM) with a camera on the right eye (RE) or the left eye (LE). The VIN is repeatable, reproducible on both mastoids in the same direction, beats away from the lesion side, starts and stops with the stimulation and presents no secondary reversal. H, horizontal component; V, vertical component; T, torsional component; N, no stimulus.
Figure 4Partial unilateral vestibular lesions [vibration-induced nystagmus (VIN) 2D recording]. (A) Example of right vestibular neuritis or acute peripheral vestibular disorder (APVD). Direct recording of head-shaking-nystagmus (HSN) and VIN at 30, 60, and 100 Hz. When skull vibration-induced nystagmus test (SVINT) is performed after the HST, it is recommended to observe an interval between the two tests (about 2 min) to avoid interference of HSN on VIN due to a possible second HSN reversal phase. (B) Same patient, right APVD: recording of the eye slow-phase velocity (SPV). (C) Right chemical labyrinthectomy (intratympanic gentamicin): 2D recording of the VIN SPV; SVINT 30 Hz [right mastoid (RM)–left mastoid (LM)]; 60 Hz (RM–LM); 100 Hz (RM–LM) protocol.
Figure 5Skull vibration-induced nystagmus test (SVINT) is more sensitive to identify peripheral than central diseases. Comparative sensitivity of caloric test (CaT), SVINT, and head-shaking test (HST) in populations of total unilateral vestibular lesions (tUVL) (n = 131), of partial unilateral vestibular lesions (pUVL) (n = 78), and brainstem lesions (BSL) (n = 36). SVINT is more sensitive to reveal peripheral than central lesions (P = 0.04).
Figure 6Results in conductive hearing loss observed in unilateral SCD and otosclerosis (OS). Vibration-induced nystagmus (VIN) acts as a vestibular Weber Test. Skull vibration-induced nystagmus test (SVINT)—percentages (with 95% confidence interval) of no VIN, VIN beating toward the healthy side, and VIN beating toward the lesion side (A) and median (with interquartile range) of the slow-phase velocity of the VIN (B) observed in superior canal dehiscence (SCD) and otosclerosis (OS) patients (**P < 0.001, ***P < 0.0001).
Figure 7Vibration-induced nystagmus complements other vestibular tests in the vestibule multifrequency analysis. Place of the SVINT in the currently known frequency spectrum of the vestibular system. This graph summarizes the complementarity of vestibular tests, introduces the concept of the optimal vestibular compensation zone for the horizontal canal and the bone conduction stimulation frequencies necessary to obtain ocular vestibular-evoked myogenic potentials and cervical evoked myogenic potentials (cVEMP) (EMG). Adapted from Chays et al. (72) modified by Dumas (university PhD thesis 2014) (73). VLF, very low frequencies; LF, low F; MF, middle F: HF, high F; VHF, very high F.
Figure 8Angular velocity data and the response to low-frequency bone-conducted vibration for an anterior semicircular canal unit. (Bottom panel) Neural activation by angular acceleration, identifying the afferent is a canal neuron. (Top Panel) Response of the same unit to bone-conducted vibration at 200 (left) and 150 Hz (right). As stimulus frequency is decreased the neuron shows increased firing—at 200 Hz there is a modest response during the stimulus but at 150 Hz there is a strong increase in firing tightly locked to the onset and offset of the brief stimulus.