Vestibular Evoked Myogenic Potential Its Basics and Clinical Applications
Başlık:
Vestibular Evoked Myogenic Potential Its Basics and Clinical Applications
ISBN:
9784431859086
Personal Author:
Edition:
1st ed. 2009.
Yayın Bilgileri:
Tokyo : Springer Japan : Imprint: Springer, 2009.
Fiziksel Tanımlama:
VII, 112 p. online resource.
Contents:
Basics -- Overview of the Vestibular System -- Sound Sensitivity of the Vestibular End-Organs and Sound-Evoked Vestibulocollic Reflexes in Mammals -- Recording and Assessing VEMPs -- VEMP Variants -- Clinical Applications -- Meniere's Disease and Related Disorders: Detection of Saccular Endolymphatic Hydrops -- Vestibular Neuritis (Neurolabyrinthitis) and Other Peripheral Vestibulopathies: Detection of Inferior Vestibular Nerve Damage -- Superior Canal Dehiscence Syndrome and VEMPs: Detection of Hypersensitivity of the Vestibular System to Sound -- Migraine-Associated Vertigo and VEMPs: Detection of Vestibular Signs in a Common but Unclear Entity -- Acoustic Neuroma and Other Cerebellopontine Angle Tumors: Detecting a Neoplasm in the Cerebellopontine Angle -- Disorders of the Central Nervous System and VEMPs: Detecting Lesions in the Vestibulospinal Pathway -- Pediatric Applications -- Neurootological Application of VEMP Recording During Infancy and Childhood.
Abstract:
The vestibular labyrinth consists of ? ve compartments: the lateral, anterior, and posterior semicircular canals, the utricule, and the saccule. At the beginning of the twentieth century, Robert Bárány proposed the caloric test as a clinical test of the lateral semicircular canal. This test enabled clinicians to assess the individual lateral semicircular canal function easily by using the simple method of irrigating the external ear canal with cold or warm water and observing the induced nyst- mus. We believe that the caloric test was a breakthrough in the ? eld of vestibular research. However, as far as the other compartments were concerned, there was no simple clinical test equal to the caloric test for the lateral semicircular canal function. At the end of the twentieth century, the vestibular evoked myogenic potential (VEMP) test was proposed as a new method for assessing the individual saccule function. This test has some unique attributes. First, it uses sound stimulation, even though it is a test of the vestibular system. This appears to be a contradiction n- rophysiologically. As a result, in its early stages there were controversies conce- ing the origin of the responses. However, such controversies have been overcome by basic neurophysiological studies and clinical studies. Above all, sound sensit- ity of the saccular afferents shown in cats and guinea pigs with single-unit recording methods became the main supporting evidence. Nowadays, VEMP is one of the routine clinical tests for balance disorder.
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Full Text Available From Springer Nature Medicine 2009 Packages
Dil:
English