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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 86 No. 2 August 2001, pp. 575-585
Copyright ©2001 by the American Physiological Society
1Neurological Sciences Institute of Oregon Health Sciences University, Beaverton, Oregon 97006; and 2Institute of Normal and Pathological Physiology SAS, 81371 Bratislava, Slovakia
Horak, F. B. and
F. Hlavacka.
Somatosensory Loss Increases Vestibulospinal Sensitivity. J. Neurophysiol. 86: 575-585, 2001. To
determine whether subjects with somatosensory loss show a compensatory
increase in sensitivity to vestibular stimulation, we compared the
amplitude of postural lean in response to four different intensities of
bipolar galvanic stimulation in subjects with diabetic peripheral
neuropathy (PNP) and age-matched control subjects. To determine whether
healthy and neuropathic subjects show similar increases in sensitivity
to galvanic vestibular stimulation when standing on unstable surfaces,
both groups were exposed to galvanic stimulation while standing on a
compliant foam surface. In these experiments, a 3-s pulse of galvanic
current was administered to subjects standing with eyes closed and
their heads turned toward one shoulder (anodal current on the forward
mastoid). Anterior body tilt, as measured by center of foot pressure
(CoP), increased proportionately with increasing galvanic vestibular
stimulation intensity for all subjects. Subjects with peripheral
neuropathy showed larger forward CoP displacement in response to
galvanic stimulation than control subjects. The largest differences
between neuropathy and control subjects were at the highest galvanic
intensities, indicating an increased sensitivity to vestibular
stimulation. Neuropathy subjects showed a larger increase in
sensitivity to vestibular stimulation when standing on compliant foam
than control subjects. The effect of galvanic stimulation was larger on
the movement of the trunk segment in space than on the body's center of mass (CoM) angle, suggesting that the vestibular system acts to
control trunk orientation rather than to control whole body posture.
This study provides evidence for an increase in the sensitivity of the
postural control system to vestibular stimulation when somatosensory
information from the surface is disrupted either by peripheral
neuropathy or by standing on an unstable surface. Simulations from a
simple model of postural orientation incorporating feedback from the
vestibular and somatosensory systems suggest that the increase in body
lean in response to galvanic current in subjects with neuropathy could
be reproduced only if central vestibular gain was increased when
peripheral somatosensory gain was decreased. The larger effects of
galvanic vestibular stimulation on the trunk than on the body's CoM
suggest that the vestibular system may act to control postural
orientation via control of the trunk in space.
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