Abstract

BackgroundEarlier studies on stance and gait with posturographic and EMG-recordings and automatic gait analysis in patients with phobic postural vertigo (PPV) or visual height intolerance (vHI) revealed similar patterns of body stiffening with muscle co-contraction and a slow, cautious gait. Visual exploration in vHI patients was characterized by a freezing of gaze-in-space when standing and reduced horizontal eye and head movements during locomotion.ObjectiveBased on the findings in vHI patients, the current study was performed with a focus on visual control of locomotion in patients with PPV while walking along a crowded hospital hallway.MethodsTwelve patients with PPV and eleven controls were recruited. Participants wore a mobile infrared video eye-tracking system that continuously measured eye-in-head movements in the horizontal and vertical planes and head orientation and motion in the yaw, pitch, and roll planes. Visual exploration behavior of participants was recorded at the individually preferred speed for a total walking distance of 200 m. Gaze-in-space directions were determined by combining eye-in-head and head-in-space orientation. Walking speeds were calculated based on the trial duration and the total distance traversed. Participants were asked to rate their feelings of discomfort during the walk on a 4-point numeric rating scale. The examiners rated the crowdedness of the hospital hallway on a 4-point numeric rating scale.ResultsThe major results of visual exploration behavior in patients with PPV in comparison to healthy controls were: eye and head positions were directed more downward in the vertical plane towards the ground ahead with increased frequency of large amplitude vertical orientation movements towards the destination, the end of the ground straight ahead. The self-adjusted speed of locomotion was significantly lower in PPV. Particularly those patients that reported high levels of discomfort exhibited a specific visual exploration of their horizontal surroundings. The durations of fixating targets in the visual surroundings were significantly shorter as compared to controls.ConclusionGaze control of locomotion in patients with PPV is characterized by a preferred deviation of gaze more downward and by horizontal explorations for suitable auxiliary means for potential postural support in order to prevent impending falls. These eye movements have shorter durations of fixation as compared to healthy controls and patients with vHI. Finally, the pathological alterations in eye–head coordination during locomotion correlate with a higher level of discomfort and anxiety about falling.

Highlights

  • Phobic postural vertigo (PPV), a subtype of persistent postural-perceptual dizziness (PPPD), is a chronic functional disorder characterized by dizziness and subjective imbalance during stance and gait despite normal performance in vestibular and clinical balance tests [1,2,3]

  • The impairment of gait correlates with subjective fear of falling and balance confidence, patients with phobic postural vertigo (PPV) do not exhibit a higher rate of falls compared to healthy controls [10]

  • The stiffened postural control by muscle cocontraction is typical for PPV, but not specific, since stance and gait in individuals with visual height intolerance or acrophobia exhibit similar stiffening of anti-gravity muscles when exposed to heights [11, 12]

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Summary

Introduction

Phobic postural vertigo (PPV), a subtype of persistent postural-perceptual dizziness (PPPD), is a chronic functional disorder characterized by dizziness and subjective imbalance during stance and gait despite normal performance in vestibular and clinical balance tests [1,2,3]. The selfadjusted speed of locomotion was significantly lower in PPV Those patients that reported high levels of discomfort exhibited a specific visual exploration of their horizontal surroundings. Conclusion Gaze control of locomotion in patients with PPV is characterized by a preferred deviation of gaze more downward and by horizontal explorations for suitable auxiliary means for potential postural support in order to prevent impending falls. These eye movements have shorter durations of fixation as compared to healthy controls and patients with vHI. The pathological alterations in eye–head coordination during locomotion correlate with a higher level of discomfort and anxiety about falling

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