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The Journal of Vestibular Research is a peer-reviewed journal that publishes experimental and observational studies, review papers, and theoretical papers based on current knowledge of the vestibular system, and letters to the Editor.
Authors: Jennings, Richard T.
Article Type: Review Article
Abstract: Space motion sickness is a well-recognized problem for space flight and affects 73% of crewmembers on the first 2 or 3 days of their initial flight. Illness severity is variable, but over half of cases are categorized as moderate to severe. Management has included elimination of provocative activities and delay of critical performance-related procedures such as extra-vehicular activity (EVA) or Shuttle landing during the first three days of missions. Pharmacological treatment strategies have had variable results, but intramuscular promethazine has been the most effective to date with a 90% initial response rate and important reduction in residual symptoms the next …flight day. Oral prophylactic treatment of crewmembers with difficulty on prior flights has had mixed results. In order to accommodate more aggressive pharmacologic management, crew medical officers receive additional training in parenteral administration of medications. Preflight medication testing is accomplished to reduce the risk of unexpected performance decrements or idiosyncratic reactions. When possible, treatment is offered in the presleep period to mask potential treatment-related drowsiness. Another phenomenon noted by crewmembers and physicians as flights have lengthened is readaptation difficulty or motion sickness on return to Earth. These problems have included nausea, vomiting, and difficulty with locomotion or coordination upon early exposure to gravity. Since landing and egress are principal concerns during this portion of the flight, these deficits are of operational concern. Postflight therapy has been directed at nausea and vomiting, and meclizine and promethazine are the principal agents used. There has been no official attempt at prophylactic treatment prior to entry. Since there is considerable individual variation in postflight deficit and since adaptation from prior flights seems to persist, it has been recommended that commanders with prior shuttle landing experience be named to flights of extended duration. Show more
Keywords: space, motion sickness, promethazine
DOI: 10.3233/VES-1998-8110
Citation: Journal of Vestibular Research, vol. 8, no. 1, pp. 67-70, 1998
Authors: Kramer, Jeffery M. | Waldrop, Tony G.
Article Type: Review Article
Abstract: Precise regulatory signals are required in order to adjust the cardiovascular and respiratory systems to meet the demands of exercise. Two neural mechanisms, central command and a reflex originating in contracting muscles, are known to play a large role in exercise-associated adjustments in cardiovascular and respiratory activity. The extent to which other regulatory reflexes, such as vestibulo-autonomic reflexes, are able to impact upon the cardiovascular and respiratory systems during exercise is largely unknown. Further, brain regions that may integrate these control mechanisms are only starting to be investigated. We propose that medullary brain nuclei may integrate both exercise and vestibular …signals to produce a more coordinated, and therefore efficient, means of adaptation to exercise in a gravitational environment. Show more
Keywords: exercise, vestibular, autonomic, integration
DOI: 10.3233/VES-1998-8111
Citation: Journal of Vestibular Research, vol. 8, no. 1, pp. 71-80, 1998
Authors: Hobson, J. Allan | Stickgold, Robert | Pace-Schott, Edward F. | Leslie, Kenneth R.
Article Type: Review Article
Abstract: Optimal human performance depends upon integrated sensorimotor and cognitive functions, both of which are known to be exquisitely sensitive to loss of sleep. Under the microgravity conditions of space flight, adaptation of both sensorimotor (especially vestibular) and cognitive functions (especially orientation) must occur quickly-and be maintained-despite any concurrent disruptions of sleep that may be caused by microgravity itself, or by the uncomfortable sleeping conditions of the spacecraft. It is the three-way interaction between sleep quality, general work efficiency, and sensorimotor integration that is the subject of this paper and the focus of new work in our laboratory. To record sleep …under field conditions including microgravity, we utilize a novel system called the Nightcap that we have developed and extensively tested on normal and sleep-disordered subjects. To perturb the vestibular system in ground-based studies, we utilize a variety of experimental conditions including optokinetic stimulation and both minifying and reversing goggle paradigms that have been extensively studied in relation to plasticity of the vestibulo-ocular reflex. Using these techniques we will test the hypothesis that vestibular adaptation both provokes and is enhanced by REM sleep under both ground-based and space conditions. In this paper we describe preliminary results of some of our studies. Show more
Keywords: sleep, vestibular adaptation, REM sleep, microgravity
DOI: 10.3233/VES-1998-8112
Citation: Journal of Vestibular Research, vol. 8, no. 1, pp. 81-94, 1998
Authors: Mullen, Thomas J. | Berger, Ronald D. | Oman, Charles M. | Cohen, Richard J.
Article Type: Research Article
Abstract: In a study of 18 human subjects, we applied a new technique, estimation of the transfer function between instantaneous lung volume (ILV) and instantaneous heart rate (HR), to assess autonomic activity during motion sickness. Two control recordings of ILV and electrocardiogram (ECG) were made prior to the development of motion sickness. During the first, subjects were seated motionless, and during the second they were seated rotating sinusoidally about an earth vertical axis. Subjects then wore prism goggles that reverse the left-right visual field and performed manual tasks until they developed moderate motion sickness. Finally, ILV and ECG were recorded while …subjects maintained a relatively constant level of sickness by intermittent eye closure during rotation with the goggles. Based on analyses of ILV to HR transfer functions from the three conditions, we were unable to demonstrate a change in autonomic control of heart rate due to rotation alone or due to motion sickness. These findings do not support the notion that moderate motion sickness is manifested as a generalized autonomic response. Show more
Keywords: nausea and vomiting syndromes, parasympathetic, sympathetic, autonomic nervous system, transfer function estimation
DOI: 10.3233/VES-1998-8113
Citation: Journal of Vestibular Research, vol. 8, no. 1, pp. 95-105, 1998
Authors: Schor, Robert H. | Steinbacher Jr., Bernard C. | Yates, Bill J.
Article Type: Research Article
Abstract: Responses to linear accelerations in the earth-horizontal plane (typically provoked by tilts of the head or body) are characterized by a stimulus direction that produces the maximal excitation. Although changes in cardiovascular, sympathetic, and respiratory outflow are maximized during pitch, no collection of central vestibular neurons had been identified where pitch responses predominate. In the present study, response properties of neurons in the medial vestibular nucleus were examined in decerebrate cats placed on a turntable. Activation of otolith afferents was provided by constant velocity rotation with the turntable axis tilted 5° from the vertical. Responsive neurons exhibited a sinusoidal modulation …in their tiring rate; the optimal excitatory stimulus direction was derived from responses to clockwise and counterclockwise rotations. Many of these neurons were also tested for input from horizontal semicircular canals using 0.5 Hz sinusoidal rotation about an earth-vertical axis. Of 22 tilt-sensitive neurons in the medial vestibular nucleus whose optimal stimulus direction was determined, 9 were best stimulated by pitch, 10 by stimuli in one of the two vertical semicircular canal planes, and 3 by roll. Of the 33 neurons in this nucleus tested for possible convergent inputs from the otolith organs and the horizontal semicircular canals, 8 responded to both the constant velocity (otolith) stimulus and to the sinusoidal rotation, 7 appeared to receive otolith, but not horizontal canal, input, while 18 had a canal, but no otolith, response. Thus, besides serving as a relay for horizontal canal signals, the medial vestibular nucleus may also be an important relay for information about orientation within the sagittal (pitch) plane. Show more
Keywords: medial vestibular nucleus, linear acceleration response, vestibuloautonomic response
DOI: 10.3233/VES-1998-8114
Citation: Journal of Vestibular Research, vol. 8, no. 1, pp. 107-116, 1998
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