The Problem of Central Compensation of Peripheral Vestibular Dysfunctions
- 1 January 1971
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Acta Oto-Laryngologica
- Vol. 71 (1-6) , 266-272
- https://doi.org/10.3109/00016487109125362
Abstract
The present study is based upon the results of repeated vestibular examinations under nystagmographic control, performed in a group of patients with strictly unilateral peripheral vestibular lesions. Central compensation of peripheral vestibular dysfunctions is based upon two entirely different mechanisms: the first one is a specific vestibular phenomenon, depending on the integrity of the efferent vestibular system. It is termed “accommodation”, i.e. by means of the efferent fibres the responses from the remaining intact labyrinth are modulated, adjusting them to be functional deficiency (inhibition and facilitation). Accommodation is generally completed within a short time unless there is a lesion of the elements of the vestibular ganglion or an impairment of conductivity of the peripheral neuron. Functional disorders at the level of the vestibular ganglion or of the first neuron will implicate uncomplete and delayed accommodation. The second mechanism is a non-specific central phenomenon, substituting the deficient vestibular functions by optic and somatosensory regulation. Hence the term central compensation should strictly speaking be used only for this particular phenomenon. It depends upon the functional integrity of the central nervous system. For this reason traumatic and vascular lesions of the brain will delay the achievement of this compensatory mechanism according to the severity of the central disorder.Keywords
This publication has 6 references indexed in Scilit:
- Experiments on vestibular compensation.The Laryngoscope, 1969
- Central Regulation of the Vestibular SystemJAMA Otolaryngology–Head & Neck Surgery, 1967
- Erholungs-Nystagmus nach einseitigen Labyrinthschäden und seine BegleitsymptomePublished by Springer Nature ,1965
- Zur Bedeutung peripher- und zentral-vestibulärer Störungen nach KopftraumenPublished by Springer Nature ,1962
- “Erholungsnystagmus” nach einseitigem Vestibularisausfall, ein dem Bechterew-Nystagmus verwandter VorgangPublished by Springer Nature ,1959
- Ergebnisse der Durchschneidung des N. acusticus, nebst Erörterung der Bedeutung der semicirculären Canäle für das KörpergleichgewichtPflügers Archiv - European Journal of Physiology, 1883