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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 83 No. 1 January 2000, pp. 38-49
Copyright ©2000 by the American Physiological Society
Departments of Ophthalmology and Neurology, University of California, Los Angeles, California 90095-7002
Crane, Benjamin T. and
Joseph L. Demer.
Effect of Adaptation to Telescopic Spectacles on the Initial
Human Horizontal Vestibuloocular Reflex. J. Neurophysiol. 83: 38-49, 2000. Gain of the vestibuloocular
reflex (VOR) not only varies with target distance and rotational axis,
but can be chronically modified in response to prolonged wearing of
head-mounted magnifiers. This study examined the effect of adaptation
to telescopic spectacles on the variation of the VOR with changes in
target distance and yaw rotational axis for head velocity transients
having peak accelerations of 2,800 and 1,000°/s2. Eye and
head movements were recorded with search coils in 10 subjects who
underwent whole body rotations around vertical axes that were 10 cm
anterior to the eyes, centered between the eyes, between the otoliths,
or 20 cm posterior to the eyes. Immediately before each rotation,
subjects viewed a target 15 or 500 cm distant. Lighting was
extinguished immediately before and was restored after completion of
each rotation. After initial rotations, subjects wore 1.9×
magnification binocular telescopic spectacles during their daily
activities for at least 6 h. Test spectacles were removed and
measurement rotations were repeated. Of the eight subjects tolerant of
adaptation to the telescopes, six demonstrated VOR gain enhancement
after adaptation, while gain in two subjects was not increased. For all
subjects, the earliest VOR began 7-10 ms after onset of head rotation
regardless of axis eccentricity or target distance. Regardless of
adaptation, VOR gain for the proximate target exceeded that for the
distant target beginning at 20 ms after onset of head rotation.
Adaptation increased VOR gain as measured 90-100 ms after head
rotation onset by an average of 0.12 ± 0.02 (SE) for the higher
head acceleration and 0.19 ± 0.02 for the lower head
acceleration. After adaptation, four subjects exhibited significant
increases in the canal VOR gain only, whereas two subjects exhibited
significant increases in both angular and linear VOR gains. The
latencies of linear and early angular target distance effects on VOR
gain were unaffected by adaptation. The earliest significant change in
angular VOR gain in response to adaptation occurred 50 and 68 ms after
onset of the 2,800 and 1,000°/s2 peak head accelerations,
respectively. The latency of the adaptive increase in linear VOR gain
was ~50 ms for the peak head acceleration of 2,800°/s2,
and 100 ms for the peak head acceleration of 1,000°/s2.
Thus VOR gain changes and latency were consistent with modification in
the angular VOR in most subjects, and additionally in the linear VOR in
a minority of subjects.
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