| Literature DB >> 3196897 |
K Fukushima1, J Fukushima, M Kato.
Abstract
Head tilt is one of the most characteristic and enduring symptoms produced by hemilabyrinthectomy and is compensated by the central nervous system with time. In order to study the central mechanisms of compensation of the head tilt, it is first necessary to understand how it is produced. However, its mechanism remains unknown. Experiments were performed in cats to examine whether the direct vestibulocollic pathways are responsible for the head tilt, as suggested by some authors. Hemilabyrinthectomies produced a characteristic head tilt in cats in which the medial and/or one lateral vestibulospinal tracts (VSTs) had been interrupted. The lesions of the medial VST did not influence the preexisting head tilt produced by hemilabyrinthectomies. These results suggest that the head tilt produced by hemilabyrinthectomies does not depend on the activity of the VSTs.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 1988 PMID: 3196897 DOI: 10.1159/000116545
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Brain Behav Evol ISSN: 0006-8977 Impact factor: 1.808