Affiliation:
1. National VA Parkinson Consortium Center, Neurology Service, Louis Stokes Cleveland VA Medical Center Cleveland Ohio USA
2. Department of Neurology Case Western Reserve University Cleveland Ohio USA
3. Movement Disorders Center Neurological Institute, University Hospitals Cleveland Ohio USA
4. Department of Biomedical Engineering Case Western Reserve University Cleveland Ohio USA
Abstract
AbstractBackgroundCervical dystonia (CD) is an intricate neurological condition with motor and nonmotor symptoms. These include disruptions in visual perception, self‐orientation, visual working memory, and vestibular functions. However, the specific impact of CD on perceiving self‐motion direction, especially with isolated visual or vestibular stimuli, remains largely unexplored.ObjectiveThis study aimed to examine the effects of CD on linear motion perception, hypothesizing impaired heading discrimination in both vestibular and visual tasks, and that such deficits correlate with the disease severity.MethodsWe employed a cutting‐edge motion platform to precisely control whole‐body linear motion. Through repeated two‐alternative forced‐choice tasks, we assessed vestibular heading direction discrimination. Participants observed dynamic star clouds in immersive virtual reality and indicated their perceived self‐motion direction, evaluating visual heading direction discrimination. Sensitivity to direction variations and response accuracy errors were analyzed using robust Gaussian cumulative distribution psychometric functions.ResultsHeading perception is impaired in individuals with CD, particularly evident in vestibular heading discrimination. CD severity correlated with elevated thresholds for both vestibular and visual heading discrimination. Surprisingly, lateralized CD did not introduce bias in either system, suggesting widespread disruption over localized effects.ConclusionsContrary to previous beliefs, our findings challenge the idea that CD‐related heading discrimination issues mainly arise from peripheral vestibular effects. Instead, abnormal proprioceptive input from dystonic neck muscles introduces noise into the central mechanism integrating visual, vestibular, and proprioceptive signals. These insights into spatial navigation deficits have implications for future CD research. © 2023 The Authors. Movement Disorders published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society. This article has been contributed to by U.S. Government employees and their work is in the public domain in the USA.
Funder
American Academy of Neurology
U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs
Subject
Neurology (clinical),Neurology
Cited by
2 articles.
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