1989
DOI: 10.1159/000276079
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Recovery of Gaze Disturbance in Bilateral Labyrinthine Loss

Abstract: Recovery of gaze disturbance was studied in 15 patients with bilateral labyrinthine loss who underwent active or passive rotation tests at various times after onset, 1 month to 34 years. Mean VOR gain increased rapidly against the logarithm of time under active rotations and slowly under passive rotations. Although gaze disturbance recovered in the 1st year under both active and passive rotations, active ones resulted in better gaze stabilization at higher frequencies. The present study indicated that initiati… Show more

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Cited by 8 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…Bilateral labyrinthine loss resulted in re markable gaze disturbances, whether the le sion was acquired or congenital [6], How- ever, gaze disturbance in acquired lesions showed recovery within a year after onset, the degree of which was more prominent under active rotation than under passive ro tation [7], The ratio of the gain under the spatially fixed target condition to the gain in the dark amounted to large values at 0.2 Hz (4.3 on average), however, it markedly de creased at 0.85 Hz (1.8). The relationship between visual and vestibular input changed linearly with an increase in the rotation fre quency, and the frequency range at which head movements were compensated for de clined as vestibular input decreased.…”
Section: Deficient Compensationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Bilateral labyrinthine loss resulted in re markable gaze disturbances, whether the le sion was acquired or congenital [6], How- ever, gaze disturbance in acquired lesions showed recovery within a year after onset, the degree of which was more prominent under active rotation than under passive ro tation [7], The ratio of the gain under the spatially fixed target condition to the gain in the dark amounted to large values at 0.2 Hz (4.3 on average), however, it markedly de creased at 0.85 Hz (1.8). The relationship between visual and vestibular input changed linearly with an increase in the rotation fre quency, and the frequency range at which head movements were compensated for de clined as vestibular input decreased.…”
Section: Deficient Compensationmentioning
confidence: 99%