Title: Functional localization of vestibular cerebral representations in human using functional magnetic resonance imaging
Abstract:Objective
To study human vestibular cerebral representations by combining right-sided ice-water stimulation at 0℃ with blood oxygenation level dependent functional magnetic resonance imaging (BOLD-fM...Objective
To study human vestibular cerebral representations by combining right-sided ice-water stimulation at 0℃ with blood oxygenation level dependent functional magnetic resonance imaging (BOLD-fMRI) and to evaluate the value of this method in the functional localization of human vestibular cortex.
Methods
Twenty right-handed volunteers (12 men and 8 women) received unilateral irrigation of the right external auditory meatu for 15 s with 15 ml of water at 0℃ during fMRI in complete darkness. The functional imaging of brain cortex was acquired with a 1.5-T MRI scanner (Signa Infinity Twin + Excite; General Electric Co. , USA). The successive functional images from each subject were analyzed as a group with statistical parametric mapping software (SPM99).
Results
Ultimately, data obtained from 17 subjects were analyzed (3 subjects were eliminated from data because of head movement exceeding 2 mm). The group analysis showed bilateral (particularly left-sided) cortical activation, associated with caloric stimulus involving in temporoparietal junction extending into the posterior insula, supramarginal gyrus in the inferior parietal lobe, precuneus, supplementary motor area (SMA), the ventrolateral portion of the occipital lobe, cuneus and lingual gyms, superior temporal gyms and cingular cortex.
Conclusions
Ice-water stimulation at 0℃ in fMRI reveals a widespread cortical network involved in vestibular signal processing in human. As the functional localization of vestibular cortex could be determined precisely, ice-water stimulation at 0℃ in fMRI would hold great promise as a sensitive and reproducible tool for the research in human vestibular cortex.
Key words:
Cerebral cortex; Vestibular nuclei; Vestibular function tests; Magnetic resonance imagingRead More
Publication Year: 2006
Publication Date: 2006-10-01
Language: en
Type: article
Indexed In: ['pubmed']
Access and Citation
Cited By Count: 1
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