Abstract

Introduction: The unilateral vestibular syndrome results in postural, oculomotor, perceptive, and cognitive symptoms. This study was designed to investigate the role of vestibular signals in body orientation representation, which remains poorly considered in vestibular patients.Methods: The subjective straight ahead (SSA) was investigated using a method disentangling translation and rotation components of error. Participants were required to align a rod with their body midline in the horizontal plane. Patients with right vestibular neurotomy (RVN; n =8) or left vestibular neurotomy (LVN; n = 13) or vestibular schwannoma resection were compared with 12 healthy controls. Patients were tested the day before surgery and during the recovery period, 7 days and 2 months after the surgery.Results: Before and after unilateral vestibular neurotomy, i.e., in the chronic phases, patients showed a rightward translation bias of their SSA, without rotation bias, whatever the side of the vestibular loss. However, the data show that the lower the translation error before neurotomy, the greater its increase 2 months after a total unilateral vestibular loss, therefore leading to a rightward translation of similar amplitude in the two groups of patients. In the early phase after surgery, SSA moved toward the operated side both in translation and in rotation, as typically found for biases occurring after unilateral vestibular loss, such as the subjective visual vertical (SVV) bias.Discussion and Conclusion: This study gives the first description of the immediate consequences and of the recovery time course of body orientation representation after a complete unilateral vestibular loss. The overall evolution differed according to the side of the lesion with more extensive changes over time before and after left vestibular loss. It is noteworthy that representational disturbances of self-orientation were highly unusual in the chronic stage after vestibular loss and similar to those reported after hemispheric lesions causing spatial neglect, while classical ipsilesional biases were reported in the acute stage. This study strongly supports the notion that the vestibular system plays a major role in body representation processes and more broadly in spatial cognition. From a clinical point of view, SSA appeared to be a reliable indicator for the presence of a vestibular disorder.

Highlights

  • The unilateral vestibular syndrome results in postural, oculomotor, perceptive, and cognitive symptoms

  • The initial (D–1) translation error correlated with the vestibular loss as evidenced by the caloric test and the vestibuloocular reflex (VOR) gain

  • This study offers the first description of the immediate consequences and of the recovery time course of self-orientation representation after a complete unilateral vestibular loss

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Summary

Introduction

The unilateral vestibular syndrome results in postural, oculomotor, perceptive, and cognitive symptoms. Unilateral vestibular disorders are associated with various anomalies in postural and spatial processing Among all, this includes head and body deviations in both static (Brandt and Dieterich, 1987; Vibert et al, 1996; Borel et al, 2001) and dynamic postural conditions (Borel et al, 2002; Halmagyi et al, 2010), as well as a deviation of the locomotor trajectory (Cohen, 2000; Brandt et al, 2001; Borel et al, 2004). When the injury occurs at the peripheral level, the subjective perception of verticality is deflected ipsilesionally (Friedmann, 1970; Böhmer and Mast, 1999; Vibert and Häusler, 2000; Lopez et al, 2007; Faralli et al, 2021)

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