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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 82 No. 2 August 1999, pp. 1033-1053
Copyright ©1999 by the American Physiological Society
1Department of Bioengineering, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah 84112; 2Department of Otolaryngology/Head-Neck Surgery and Department of Physiology and Pharmacology, Oregon Health Sciences University, Portland, Oregon 97201; 3Departments of Otolaryngology and Neurobiology, Washington University, St. Louis, Missouri 63110; and 4Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole, Massachusetts 02543
Rabbitt, R. D.,
R. Boyle, and
S. M. Highstein.
Influence of Surgical Plugging on Horizontal Semicircular Canal
Mechanics and Afferent Response Dynamics. J. Neurophysiol. 82: 1033-1053, 1999. Mechanical
occlusion of one or more of the semicircular canals is a surgical
procedure performed clinically to treat
certain vestibular disorders and used experimentally to assess
individual contributions of separate canals and/or otoliths to
vestibular neural pathways. The present experiments were designed to
determine if semicircular canal afferent nerve modulation to angular
head acceleration is blocked by occlusion of the endolymphatic duct, and if not, what mechanism(s) might account for a persistent afferent response. The perilymphatic space was opened to gain acute access to
the horizontal canal (HC) in the oyster toadfish, Opsanus
tau. Firing rate responses of HC afferents to sinusoidal
whole-body rotation were recorded in the unoccluded control condition,
during the process of duct occlusion, and in the plugged condition. The results show that complete occlusion of the duct did not block horizontal canal sensitivity; individual afferents often exhibited a
robust firing rate modulation in response to whole-body rotation in the
plugged condition. At high stimulus frequencies (about >8 Hz) the
average sensitivity (afferent gain; spikes/s per °/s of head
velocity) in the plugged condition was nearly equal to that observed
for unoccluded controls in the same animals. At low stimulus
frequencies (about <0.1 Hz), the average sensitivity in the plugged
condition was attenuated by more than two orders of magnitude relative
to unoccluded controls. The peak afferent firing rate for sinusoidal
stimuli was phase advanced ~90° in plugged canals relative to their
control counterparts for stimulus frequencies ~0.1-2 Hz. Data
indicate that afferents normally sensitive to angular velocity in the
control condition became sensitive to angular acceleration in the
plugged condition, whereas afferents sensitive to angular acceleration
in the control condition became sensitive to the derivative of
acceleration or angular jerk in the plugged condition. At higher
frequencies (>8 Hz), the phase of afferents in the plugged condition
became nearly equal, on average, to that observed in controls. A
three-dimensional biomechanical model of the HC was developed to
interpret the residual response in the plugged condition. Labyrinthine
fluids were modeled as incompressible and Newtonian; the membranous
duct, osseous canal and temporal bone were modeled as visco-elastic
materials. The predicted attenuation and phase shift in cupular
responses were in close agreement with the observed changes in afferent
response dynamics after canal plugging. The model attributes the
response of plugged canals to labyrinthine fluid pressure gradients
that lead to membranous duct deformation, a spatial redistribution of
labyrinthine fluids and cupular displacement. Validity of the model was
established through its ability to predict: the relationship between
plugged canal responses and unoccluded controls (present study), the
relationship between afferent responses recorded during mechanical
indentation of the membranous duct and physiological head rotation, the
magnitude and phase of endolymphatic pressure generated during HC duct
indentation, and previous model results for cupular gain and phase in
the rigid-duct case. The same model was adjusted to conform to the
morphology of the squirrel monkey and of the human to investigate the
possible influence of canal plugging in primates. Membranous duct
stiffness and perilymphatic cavity stiffness were identified as the
most salient model parameters. Simulations indicate that canal plugging
may be the most effective in relatively small species having small
labyrinths, stiff round windows, and stiff bony perilymphatic enclosures.
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