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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 87 No. 2 February 2002, pp. 962-975
Copyright ©2002 by the American Physiological Society
1Neurological Sciences Institute, Oregon Health and Science University, Beaverton, Oregon 97006; 2Department of Internal Medicine, Section of Human Physiology, University of Perugia, I-06100 Perugia, Italy; and 3Department of Otolaryngology, Toyama Medical and Pharmaceutical University, Toyama 930-01, Japan
Barmack, N. H.,
P. Errico,
A. Ferraresi,
H. Fushiki,
V. E. Pettorossi, and
V. Yakhnitsa.
Cerebellar Nodulectomy Impairs Spatial Memory of Vestibular and
Optokinetic Stimulation in Rabbits. J. Neurophysiol. 87: 962-975, 2002. Natural vestibular and
optokinetic stimulation were used to investigate the possible
role of the cerebellar nodulus in the regulation and modification
of reflexive eye movements in rabbits. The nodulus and folium 9d of the
uvula were destroyed by surgical aspiration. Before and after
nodulectomy the vertical and horizontal vestibuloocular reflexes (VVOR,
HVOR) were measured during sinusoidal vestibular stimulation about the
longitudinal (roll) and vertical (yaw) axes. Although the gain of the
HVOR (GHVOR = peak eye movement velocity/peak head
velocity) was not affected by the nodulectomy, the gain of the VVOR
(GVVOR) was reduced. The gains of the vertical and
horizontal optokinetic reflexes (GVOKR, GHOKR)
were measured during monocular, sinusoidal optokinetic stimulation
(OKS) about the longitudinal and vertical axes. Following nodulectomy,
there was no reduction in GVOKR or GHOKR.
Long-term binocular OKS was used to generate optokinetic
afternystagmus, OKAN II, that lasts for hours. After OKAN II was
induced, rabbits were subjected to static pitch and roll, to determine
how the plane and velocity of OKAN II is influenced by a changing
vestibular environment. During static pitch, OKAN II slow phase
remained aligned with earth-horizontal. This was true for normal and
nodulectomized rabbits. During static roll, OKAN II remained aligned
with earth-horizontal in normal rabbits. During static roll in
nodulectomized rabbits, OKAN II slow phase developed a centripetal
vertical drift. We examined the suppression and recovery of
GVVOR following exposure to conflicting vertical OKS for
10-30 min. This vestibular-optokinetic conflict reduced
GVVOR in both normal and nodulectomized rabbits. The time
course of recovery of GVVOR after conflicting OKS was the
same before and after nodulectomy. In normal rabbits, the head
pitch angle, at which peak OKAN II velocity occurred,
corresponded to the head pitch angle maintained during long-term OKS.
If the head was maintained in a "pitched-up" or "pitched-down"
orientation during long-term OKS, the subsequently measured OKAN II
peak velocity occurred at the same orientation. This was not true for
nodulectomized rabbits, who had OKAN II peak velocities at head pitch
angles independent of those maintained during long-term OKS. We
conclude that the nodulus participates in the regulation of
compensatory reflexive movements. The nodulus also influences
"remembered" head position in space derived from previous
optokinetic and vestibular stimulation.
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