Effects of perceptible and imperceptible galvanic vestibular stimulation on the postural control of patients with bilateral vestibulopathy

被引:19
|
作者
Sprenger, Andreas [1 ,2 ]
Spliethoff, Peer [1 ]
Rother, Matthias [1 ]
Machner, Bjorn [1 ]
Helmchen, Christoph [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Hosp Schleswig Holstein, Dept Neurol, Campus Lubeck,Ratzeburger Allee 160, D-23538 Lubeck, Germany
[2] Univ Lubeck, Inst Psychol 2, Ratzeburger Allee 160, D-23562 Lubeck, Germany
关键词
Bilateral vestibulopathy; Galvanic vestibular stimulation; Posture; STOCHASTIC RESONANCE; VESTIBULOOCULAR REFLEX; BALANCE RESPONSES; FUNCTIONAL MRI; BODY BALANCE; SWAY; STABILITY; CONNECTIVITY; INSTABILITY; DURATION;
D O I
10.1007/s00415-020-09852-x
中图分类号
R74 [神经病学与精神病学];
学科分类号
摘要
Galvanic vestibular stimulation (GVS) has increasingly been used to stimulate the vestibular system in health and disease. While perceptible supra-threshold GVS destabilizes postural control in healthy control (HC) subjects, imperceptible 'noisy' GVS (nGVS) is reported to improve postural control in patients with bilateral vestibulopathy (BV) and therapeutic devices using nGVS are currently under development. We questioned (1) whether perceptible GVS destabilizes postural control of BV patients, expecting any effect to be smaller than in healthy subjects due to the patients' vestibulopathy, and (2) whether imperceptible nGVS improves postural control in comparison to an active sham stimulus in context-dependent conditions, hypothesizing that it fades off once postural control becomes more challenging with respect to its sensory (standing on foam) or cognitive (dual task) complexity. We tested postural responses of 30 BV patients to bimastoidal perceptible (lowGVS, highGVS) or imperceptible (nGVS, sham, noGVS) GVS in comparison to 24 age-matched HC. Perceptible GVS intensities were applied according to the participants' individual motion perception thresholds. Postural sway speed (PSS) was analyzed in a 4-factorial experimental design with the factors group (BV, HC), vision (eyes open/closed), condition (baseline, proprioception, cognition) and stimulation (noGVS, sham, nGVS, lowGVS, highGVS). With eyes open (EO), there were no group-related PSS differences in the baseline and cognition condition in response to either stimulations. With EO on foam and with eye closed (EC) in all conditions, patients showed larger PSS than HC, irrespective of the stimulation type. PSS differed with GVS intensities within each group but not between the groups. PSS under nGVS on EC was only smaller in patients when compared to perceptible GVS, but it was not different from noGVS or sham stimulation. Moreover, this nGVS effect was only found in the baseline but not in the more challenging dual task and foam condition. Almost half of the patients showed higher individual thresholds of motion perception of GVS compared to HC. Interestingly, this high-threshold subgroup showed significantly larger PSS with EC as compared to HC and the low-threshold patient subgroup, although both patient subgroups did not differ in vestibular parameters. We conclude, first, that perceptible GVS is able to destabilize BV patients similarly to HC subjects, suggesting sufficient vestibular afferent processing of GVS during vestibulo-spinal postural control. Second, the effect of the hitherto observed improved postural control by nGVS appears to be small during more demanding postural control conditions (foam, cognitive distraction) that are closer to the patients' everyday life, when active sham stimuli are used as control stimuli. These findings underline the meaning of active control conditions when the efficacy of nGVS is tested, e.g. in portable GVS devices in the attempt to improve postural control in BV patients. However, differential GVS effects on vestibulo-perceptional and vestibulo-spinal thresholds should be taken into account. Finally, our data suggest that individual motion perception thresholds for GVS could potentially serve as a predictor of postural control safety and falling risk in BV.
引用
收藏
页码:2383 / 2397
页数:15
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Cortical areas activated by bilateral galvanic vestibular stimulation
    Lobel, E
    Kleine, JF
    Leroy-Willig, A
    Van de Moortele, PF
    Le Bihan, D
    Grüsser, OJ
    Berthoz, A
    OTOLITH FUNCTION IN SPATIAL ORIENTATION AND MOVEMENT, 1999, 871 : 313 - 323
  • [42] POSTURAL CONTROL IN BILATERAL VESTIBULAR DISEASE
    ILMARI, P
    HEIKKI, A
    JUKKA, S
    EBERHART, M
    MANS, M
    VERTIGO, NAUSEA, TINNITUS AND HYPOACUSIA IN METABOLIC DISORDERS, 1988, 791 : 473 - 476
  • [43] Modulatory effects of somatosensory inputs on postural sway responses induced by galvanic vestibular stimulation
    Taoka, Miki
    Hashimoto, Teruo
    Obayashi, Shigeru
    Hara, Yukihiro
    Tanaka, Michio
    Iriki, Atsushi
    JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGICAL SCIENCES, 2013, 63 : S252 - S252
  • [44] Noisy vestibular stimulation increases gait speed in normals and in bilateral vestibulopathy
    Iwasaki, Shinichi
    Fujimoto, Chisato
    Egami, Naoya
    Kinoshita, Makoto
    Togo, Fumiharu
    Yamamoto, Yoshiharu
    Yamasoba, Tatsuya
    BRAIN STIMULATION, 2018, 11 (04) : 709 - 715
  • [45] Noisy vestibular stimulation improves dynamic walking stability in bilateral vestibulopathy
    Wuehr, Max
    Nusser, Eva
    Decker, Julian
    Krafczyk, Siegbert
    Straube, Andreas
    Brandt, Thomas
    Jahn, Klaus
    Schniepp, Roman
    NEUROLOGY, 2016, 86 (23) : 2196 - 2202
  • [46] Vestibular rehabilitation therapy and Nintendo Wii balance board training both improve postural control in bilateral vestibulopathy
    Jahn, Klaus
    Saul, Ann Kathrin
    Elstner, Matthias
    Sapa, Katrin
    Kellerer, Silvy
    JOURNAL OF NEUROLOGY, 2018, 265 : 70 - 73
  • [47] Can Postural Instability Respond to Galvanic Vestibular Stimulation in Patients with Parkinson's Disease?
    Kataoka, Hiroshi
    Okada, Yohei
    Kiriyama, Takao
    Kita, Yorihiro
    Nakamura, Junji
    Morioka, Shu
    Shomoto, Koji
    Ueno, Satoshi
    JOURNAL OF MOVEMENT DISORDERS, 2016, 9 (01) : 40 - +
  • [48] Vestibular rehabilitation therapy and Nintendo Wii balance board training both improve postural control in bilateral vestibulopathy
    Klaus Jahn
    Ann Kathrin Saul
    Matthias Elstner
    Katrin Sapa
    Silvy Kellerer
    Journal of Neurology, 2018, 265 : 70 - 73
  • [49] Scoping out noisy galvanic vestibular stimulation: a review of the parameters used to improve postural control
    McLaren, Ruth
    Smith, Paul F.
    Taylor, Rachael L.
    Niazi, Imran Khan
    Taylor, Denise
    FRONTIERS IN NEUROSCIENCE, 2023, 17
  • [50] Improvement of postural control in patients with peripheral vestibulopathy
    Nicolas Perez
    Elvira Santandreu
    Jesús Benitez
    Jorge Rey-Martinez
    European Archives of Oto-Rhino-Laryngology and Head & Neck, 2006, 263 : 414 - 420