AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to investigate the ocular vestibular evoked myogenic potential (OVEMP) in patients with superior canal dehiscence (SCD) to see if it produces high-amplitude, low-threshold responses that distinguish them from healthy individuals.
  • Nine patients with confirmed SCD and ten healthy controls underwent testing with sound stimuli, recording both conventional vestibular evoked myogenic potentials (VEMPs) and OVEMPs.
  • Results showed that patients with SCD had significantly larger OVEMP amplitudes and lower thresholds than the controls, indicating intense saccular activation contributing to the observed eye movements linked to their condition.

Article Abstract

Objective: Patients with superior canal dehiscence (SCD) have large sound-evoked vestibular reflexes with pathologically low threshold. We wished to determine whether a recently discovered measure of the vestibulo-ocular reflex-the ocular vestibular evoked myogenic potential (OVEMP)-produced similar high-amplitude, low-threshold responses in SCD, and could differentiate patients with SCD from normal control patients.

Methods: Nine patients with CT-confirmed SCD and 10 normal controls were stimulated with 500 Hz, 2 ms tone bursts and 0.1 ms clicks at intensities up to 142 dB peak SPL. Conventional VEMPs were recorded from the ipsilateral sternocleidomastoid muscle to determine threshold, and OVEMPs were recorded from electrode pairs placed superior and inferior to the eyes. Three-dimensional eye movements were measured with scleral dual-search coils.

Results: In patients with SCD, OVEMP amplitudes were significantly larger than normal (p<0.001) and thresholds were pathologically low. The n10 OVEMP in the contralateral inferior electrode became particularly large with increasing stimulus intensity (up to 25 microV) and with up-gaze (up to 40 microV). Sound-evoked (slow-phase) eye movements were present in all patients with SCD (vertical: upward; torsional: upper pole away from the affected side; and horizontal: towards or away from the affected side), but began only as the OVEMP response became maximal, which is consistent with the surface potentials being produced by activation of the extraocular muscles that generated the eye movements.

Conclusions: OVEMP amplitude and threshold (particularly the contralateral inferior n10 response) differentiated patients with SCD from normal controls. Our findings suggest that both the OVEMPs and induced eye movements in SCD are a result of intense saccular activation in addition to superior canal stimulation.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/jnnp.2007.126730DOI Listing

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