Affiliation:
1. Department of Otolaryngology–Head and Neck Surgery, The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center, Columbus
2. Naval Aerospace Medical Research Laboratory, Naval Medical Research Unit-Dayton, Dayton, Ohio.
Abstract
Objective
To assess vestibular (i.e., passive self-motion) perception in patients diagnosed with persistent postural-perceptual dizziness (PPPD).
Study Design
Case-controlled, cross-sectional, observational investigation.
Setting
Single-center laboratory-based study.
Patients
Thirteen patients with PPPD, 13 age-matched healthy control volunteers. Of those with PPPD, eight had co-occurring vestibular migraine (VM).
Interventions
All participants completed a vestibular threshold test battery reflecting perception with predominant inputs from (a) the otoliths (1-Hz interaural y-axis translation, 1-Hz superior-inferior z-axis translation), (b) the semicircular canals (2-Hz yaw rotation, 2-Hz tilts in the planes of the vertical canal pairs), and (c) and canal-otolith integration (0.5-Hz roll tilt).
Main Outcome Measures
Direction-recognition thresholds for each vestibular threshold test condition.
Results
Across all patients with PPPD, higher thresholds for superior-inferior z-translations thresholds in comparison to age-matched healthy control participants were identified (p < 0.001). Those patients with co-occurring VM and PPPD (PPPD/+VM) displayed significantly higher z-translation thresholds (p = 0.006), whereas patients with PPPD without VM (PPPD/−VM) displayed significantly higher roll tilt thresholds (p = 0.029).
Conclusions
Patients with PPPD did not display a global worsening of passive self-motion perception as quantified by vestibular perceptual thresholds. Instead, patients with PPPD displayed elevated thresholds for only roll tilt and z-translation thresholds, with the relative change in each threshold impacted by the co-occurrence of VM. Because both z-translation and roll tilt motions are reliant on accurate gravity perception, our data suggest that patients with PPPD may exhibit impaired processing of graviceptive cues.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Subject
Neurology (clinical),Sensory Systems,Otorhinolaryngology
Cited by
3 articles.
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