Anatomy
Physiology
Eyes
Screening
Assessment
100

Hair cells bending towards the utricle  in the horizontal SCCs cause the same response as hair cells bending away from the utricle in the VERTICAL SCCs 

What is EXCITATION

100

Injury to this cranial nerve causes vertical diplopia (double vision)? 

What is cranial nerve IV

100
This phase of nystagmus is measured by VNG and peripheral vestibular dysfunction causes this phase too? 

What is a slow phase?

100

During acute vertigo from a left vestibular impairment the patients feels like they are rotating this direction


What is to the right? 

100

SVV tilt, rotary chair VOR asymmetry values, vHIT gain and dynamic visual acuity can all be measured to assess this process.

What is compensation? 

200

Sensory neurons with the vestibular branch of the 8th cranial nerve

What is Scarpa's ganglion

200

This type of head movement stimulates the SCC and stabilizes gaze thru the VOR.

What is angular acceleration or angular rotation? 

200

Acute vestibular lesion causes a change in the excitation and inhibition properties of peripheral organs causes this eye movement

What is nystagmus

200

A low tech/bedside screener for vestibulo-spinal tract (VSR) dysfunction

What is the CTSIB

200

This questionnaire assesses a patient's confidence in activities of daily living. 

What is the ABC?

300

This is the relay center for peripheral and central vestibular information. 

What are the vestibular nuclei

300

This mechanism is thought to extend the time constants of SCC peripheral inputs for low frequency head motion/acceleration. It is also sacrificed/impaired during the compensation process after a unilateral vestibular hypofunction.

What is velocity storage?

300

During this static test, tasking is recommended and abnormal nystagmus typically does not fatigue. 

What are positional tests?

300

Negative skew, unidirectional gaze induced nystagmus, and corrective saccades with unilateral head impulse

What are the 3 signs of peripheral vestibular dysfunction from the HiNTS test

300

During VNG testing this is measured in deg/sec and can be assessed during sitting or supine positions

What is nystagmus?

400

Contains neural signals from the posterior SCC and the saccule to the vestibular nuclei

What is the inferior vestibular nerve branch

400

This is always acting on the otolith organs and deflecting hair cells when we are standing still so we always have a sense of vertical orientation. 

What is gravity? 

400
Immediately after acute peripheral vertigo with significant spontaneous nystagmus, this process will drive asymmetrical neural activity down, eliminating spontaneous nystagmus.  Vestibular suppressants have the same effect too. 

What is cerebellar clamping? 

400
A low tech/bedside test that identifies gaze instability (due to VOR dysfunction) 

What is the DVA - dynamic visual acuity test

400

This is a typical cause or finding during the VNG that can trigger an abnormal directional preoponderance %

Spontaneous nystagmus

500

This is the ipsilateral pathway that descends from the brainstem to the spinal cord and activates extensor muscles to maintain balance.

What is the lateral vestibulo-spinal tract

500

The fastigial nucleus and flocculus are two important sections of this structure for normal oculomotor function.  

What is the cerebellum?

500

This type of vestibular rehabilitation therapy is responsible for adjusting the VOR gain to improve gaze stability. 

What is adaptation

500

These eye muscles are activated during a head left head turn, by the peripheral vestibular system

What is the ipsi medial rectus and the contra lateral rectus

500

This test produces the best response with low frequency sounds and the vibration of the high intensity SPL stimulates the saccule. Also, you can have a normal response if you are deaf in the test ear.   

What is the cVEMP?