A review of mechanical and synaptic processes in otolith transduction of sound and vibration for clinical VEMP testing

Author:

Curthoys Ian S.1ORCID,Grant J. Wally2,Pastras Christopher J.3,Brown Daniel J.3ORCID,Burgess Ann M.1,Brichta Alan M.4ORCID,Lim Rebecca4

Affiliation:

1. Vestibular Research Laboratory, School of Psychology, the University of Sydney, New South Wales, Australia

2. Department of Biomedical Engineering and Mechanics, Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, Virginia

3. The Meniere’s Laboratory, Sydney Medical School, University of Sydney, New South Wales, Australia

4. School of Biomedical Sciences and Pharmacy, The University of Newcastle and Hunter Medical Research Institute. Newcastle, New South Wales, Australia

Abstract

Older studies of mammalian otolith physiology have focused mainly on sustained responses to low-frequency (<50 Hz) or maintained linear acceleration. So the otoliths have been regarded as accelerometers. Thus evidence of otolithic activation and high-precision phase locking to high-frequency sound and vibration appears to be very unusual. However, those results are exactly in accord with a substantial body of knowledge of otolith function in fish and frogs. It is likely that phase locking of otolith afferents to vibration is a general property of all vertebrates. This review examines the literature about the activation and phase locking of single otolithic neurons to air-conducted sound and bone-conducted vibration, in particular the high precision of phase locking shown by mammalian irregular afferents that synapse on striolar type I hair cells by calyx endings. Potassium in the synaptic cleft between the type I hair cell receptor and the calyx afferent ending may be responsible for the tight phase locking of these afferents even at very high discharge rates. Since frogs and fish do not possess full calyx endings, it is unlikely that they show phase locking with such high precision and to such high frequencies as has been found in mammals. The high-frequency responses have been modeled as the otoliths operating in a seismometer mode rather than an accelerometer mode. These high-frequency otolithic responses constitute the neural basis for clinical vestibular-evoked myogenic potential tests of otolith function.

Funder

The Garnett Passe and Rodney Williams Memorial Foundation

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology,General Neuroscience

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