Astasia refers to the inability to maintain upright posture during standing, despite having full motor strength. Impairment of the vestibulocerebellar pathway, graviceptive system, and cingulate motor area have been proposed to be related to astasia. However, the responsible neural pathways remain unclear. We hypothesize that there is a common neural network behind astasia. To test the hypothesis, we reviewed all reported cases with astasia, including ours, and focused on the correlation between anatomical destruction and symptom presentation. A total of 26, including ours, non-psychogenic astasia patients were identified in the English literature. Seventy-three percent of them were associated with other neurologic symptoms and sixty-two percent of reported lesions were on the right side. Contralateral lateropulsion was very common, followed by retropulsion, when describing astasia. Infarction (54%) was the most reported cause. The thalamus (65%) was the most reported location. Infarctions were the fastest to recover (mean: 10.6 days), while lesions at the brainstem needed a longer time (mean: 61.6 days). By combining the character of lateropulsion in astasia and the presentation of an interrupted graviceptive system, we concluded that the primary graviceptive system may be the common neural network behind astasia. Future studies on astasia should focus on the pathological changes in the perception of verticality in the visual world and the body.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/brainsci13101371 | DOI Listing |
J Neurophysiol
November 2024
Division of Environmental Physiology, Department of Physiology and Pharmacology, Karolinska Institute, Stockholm, Sweden.
When entering a coordinated flight turn without visual references, the perception of roll-angular displacement is determined by vestibular cues, and/or probably by assessment of the gravitoinertial (G) load (G magnitude) and its translation into the corresponding bank angle. Herein, we examined whether repeated exposures to hypergravity (G training) in a centrifuge, would advance, not only the ability to accurately assess the G load but also the capacity to detect or estimate the corresponding roll inclination of the centrifuge gondola. To this end, in nine men without piloting experience, the subjective estimation of G load and roll tilt were assessed, in complete darkness, during 5-min coordinated turns in the centrifuge, performed at 1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnn Indian Acad Neurol
October 2023
Clinical Vestibulology Observer, Otoneurology Centre, Udaipur, Rajasthan, India.
A graviceptive heavy posterior cupula typically results from cupulolithiasis and clinically manifests as short vertigo spells when the head moves in the provocative position. Half-Hallpike test (HHT) in posterior cupulolithiasis (PSC-BPPV-) elicits an upbeating ipsitorsional nystagmus (UBITN), which lasts more than a minute as per the consensus criteria developed by the Barany Society. In the last decade, cases with canalolithiasis in the short arm of the posterior semicircular canal (PSC-BPPV-), wherein the otoconial debris falls on the utricular side of the posterior cupula on getting up from supine, rendering it heavy (graviceptive), have been reported.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBrain Sci
September 2023
Department of Neurosurgery, Chang Gung Memorial Hospital at Keelung, Keelung 204, Taiwan.
Astasia refers to the inability to maintain upright posture during standing, despite having full motor strength. Impairment of the vestibulocerebellar pathway, graviceptive system, and cingulate motor area have been proposed to be related to astasia. However, the responsible neural pathways remain unclear.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Plant Res
March 2023
Laboratory for Cognitive Systems and Cybernetics Research, Center for Soft Computing Research, Indian Statistical Institute, Kolkata, 700 108, India.
Plants' ability to sense and respond to gravity is a unique and fundamental process. When a plant organ is tilted, it adjusts its growth orientation relative to gravity direction, which is achieved by a curvature of the organ. In higher, multicellular plants, it is thought that the relative directional change of gravity is detected by starch-filled organelles that occur inside specialized cells called statocytes, and this is followed by signal conversion from physical information to physiological information within the statocytes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Neurol Sci
February 2023
Department of Neurology, University Hospitals and Cleveland VA Medical Center, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH, USA.
Background: Advances in neurotechnologies are revolutionizing our understanding of complex neural circuits and enabling new treatments for disorders of the human brain. In the vestibular system, electromagnetic stimuli can now modulate vestibular reflexes and sensations of self-motion by artificially stimulating the labyrinth, cerebellum, cerebral cortex, and their connections.
Objective: In this narrative review, we describe evolving neuromodulatory techniques including magnetic vestibular stimulation (MVS), deep brain stimulation (DBS), transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS), and transcranial direct-current stimulation (tDCS) and discuss current and potential future application in the field of neuro-otology.
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