New insights into vestibular-saccade interaction based on covert corrective saccades in patients with unilateral vestibular deficits.

Colagiorgio, Paolo; Versino, Maurizio; Colnaghi, Silvia; Quaglieri, Silvia; Manfrin, Marco; Zamaro, Ewa; Mantokoudis, Georgios; Zee, David S; Ramat, Stefano (2017). New insights into vestibular-saccade interaction based on covert corrective saccades in patients with unilateral vestibular deficits. Journal of neurophysiology, 117(6), pp. 2324-2338. American Physiological Society 10.1152/jn.00864.2016

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In response to passive high-acceleration head impulses, patients with low vestibulo-ocular reflex (VOR) gains often produce covert (executed while the head is still moving) corrective saccades in the direction of deficient slow phases. Here we examined 23 patients using passive, and 9 also active, head impulses with acute (< 10 days from onset) unilateral vestibular neuritis and low VOR gains. We found that when corrective saccades are larger than 10°, the slow-phase component of the VOR is inhibited, even though inhibition increases further the time to reacquire the fixation target. We also found that 1) saccades are faster and more accurate if the residual VOR gain is higher, 2) saccades also compensate for the head displacement that occurs during the saccade, and 3) the amplitude-peak velocity relationship of the larger corrective saccades deviates from that of head-fixed saccades of the same size. We propose a mathematical model to account for these findings hypothesizing that covert saccades are driven by a desired gaze position signal based on a prediction of head displacement using vestibular and extravestibular signals, covert saccades are controlled by a gaze feedback loop, and the VOR command is modulated according to predicted saccade amplitude. A central and novel feature of the model is that the brain develops two separate estimates of head rotation, one for generating saccades while the head is moving and the other for generating slow phases. Furthermore, while the model was developed for gaze-stabilizing behavior during passively induced head impulses, it also simulates both active gaze-stabilizing and active gaze-shifting eye movements.NEW & NOTEWORTHY During active or passive head impulses while fixating stationary targets, low vestibulo-ocular gain subjects produce corrective saccades when the head is still moving. The mechanisms driving these covert saccades are poorly understood. We propose a mathematical model showing that the brain develops two separate estimates of head rotation: a lower level one, presumably in the vestibular nuclei, used to generate the slow-phase component of the response, and a higher level one, within a gaze feedback loop, used to drive corrective saccades.

Item Type:

Journal Article (Original Article)

Division/Institute:

04 Faculty of Medicine > Department of Head Organs and Neurology (DKNS) > Clinic of Ear, Nose and Throat Disorders (ENT)

UniBE Contributor:

Zamaro, Ewa, Mantokoudis, Georgios

Subjects:

600 Technology > 610 Medicine & health

ISSN:

0022-3077

Publisher:

American Physiological Society

Language:

English

Submitter:

Stefan Weder

Date Deposited:

20 Mar 2018 14:13

Last Modified:

05 Dec 2022 15:10

Publisher DOI:

10.1152/jn.00864.2016

PubMed ID:

28404827

Uncontrolled Keywords:

VOR covert saccades gaze feedback loop mathematical model vestibular neuritis

BORIS DOI:

10.7892/boris.110929

URI:

https://boris.unibe.ch/id/eprint/110929

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