Vestibular syndromes in roll plane: graviceptive pathways from otoliths and vertical semicircular canals (SCCs) mediating vestibular function in roll plane.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Primary sensory cortex Superior temporal gyrus Third-order neurons Oculomotor nucleus (III) Trochlear nucleus (IV) Abducens nucleus (IV) Lateral vestibulospinal.
Advertisements

Eye movements and visual stability Kandel et al Ch 29, end of Wolfe Ch 8 Kandel Ch 39 for more info. Advanced: Werner & Chalupa Ch 63.
905-1 Horizontal Gaze Palsy. Left esotropia; fascicular sixth nerve palsy, left horizontal gaze palsy.
Review of The vestibular system Two classes of sensory subsystems:
Visual Neuroanatomy Efferent Pathways
Compensatory Eye Movements John Simpson. Functional Classification of Eye Movements Vestibulo-ocular Optokinetic Uses vestibular input to hold images.
Chapter 11 The Auditory and Vestibular Systems
The oculomotor system Bijan Pesaran April 29, 2008.
Brainstem Stroke Annegret Dahlmann-Noor
Gross Anatomy of the Eye Cornea at anterior –Light passes to lens Retina at posterior –sensory tissue –sensory cells: rods and cones.
The oculomotor system Or Fear and Loathing at the Orbit Michael E. Goldberg, M.D.
CRANIAL NERVE NUCLEI - LECTURE A NBIO 401 – Wednesday, October 3, 2012.
Please sit where you can examine a partner
Anatomy and Physiology of Balance Vestibular Hair Cells Type I (aka inner) Type II (aka outer) With Kinocilium.
No. 27 Sensory nervous pathways (2) Sensory nervous pathways (2)
Sensory Systems: The Vestibular System Dr. Jonathan Spindel CSD and ISAT James Madison University.
Vestibular System. I. Functions of the Vestibular System Functions to maintain both static and dynamic (i.e., kinetic) equilibrium of the body and its.
Vestibular system Part of the membranous labyrinth of the inner ear
The oculomotor system Please sit where you can examine a partner
Copyright © 2014 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
NSCI 324* Systems Neuroscience Doug Munoz Centre for Neuroscience Studies Botterell Hall, room 226 x32111 Tutorial: Monday Jan 23,
Vision, Eyeball Movement & Balance System II
LAB #7 VISION, EYEBALL MOVEMENT AND BALANCE SYSTEMS II.
Brainstem Anatomy. General Organization General organization Sensory cranial nerve nuclei are lateral Sensory cranial nerve nuclei are lateral Motor.
Date of download: 6/3/2016 Copyright © 2016 American Medical Association. All rights reserved. From: Dissociated Vertical Divergence: A Righting Reflex.
Functional Components of Peripheral Nerves
Anatomy and Physiology of Balance Vestibular Hair Cells Type I (aka inner) Type II (aka outer) With Kinocilium.
Vestibular System Dr. G.R. Leichnetz.
Anatomy of derivative of the Metencephalon and Mesencephalon
Lundy-Ekman Chapters 14, 15 and 16
Examples of oVEMP responses to bone-conducted vibration at Fz in healthy subjects (A) and a patient with a complete unilateral vestibular loss (B). In.
Brainstem 3 Midbrain.
Ocular Motor Nerves Visual Pathways – Neuroanatomy – for grade III medical students 蔡子同 成大醫院神經科 2012/05/09.
Neurological Department, Klinikum Worms, Germany
Vestibular apparatus. Vestibulo-ocular reflex.
Dr. Farah Nabil Abbas MBChB, MSc, PhD.
Oculomotor System Dr. G.R. Leichnetz.
Cochlear implant. (A) A multichannel cochlear implant processor, microphone, and magnet coil. (B) Cochlear implant internal device electrode array and.
The Vestibulo-cochlear Nerve (Cranial Nerve 8) (Vestibular & Auditory Pathways) By : Prof. Ahmed Fathalla & Dr. Sanaa AlShaarawy.
Skew Deviation Revisited
Chapter 10 The Ocular Motor System: Gaze Disorders.
Types of hearing aids. Left, in-the-ear; center, behind the ear; right, in-the-canal. Source: Assessment and Management of Auditory Disorders and Tinnitus,
MOTOR CONTROL.
a Cerebrum b Cerebellum Left cerebral hemisphere Gyri Sulci
Central vestibular processing
Vestibular System To maintain balance and maintenance of gaze (eye position) and posture (skeletal position). Requires 2 out of 3 components: inner ear,
Please sit where you can examine a partner
The Labyrinth and Its Innervation
Eye movements Domina Petric, MD.
Unlocking the Mysteries of the Vestibular System
Brain stem Lec 11.
The Cerebellum SHANDONG UNIVERSITY Liu Zhiyu
Ocular Motor Abnormalities in Wallenberg's Lateral Medullary Syndrome
The Vestibular System: Or, why we don’t fall in the dark!
A&P of Posture: The Descending Tracts
Upper & Lower Motor Systems
PHYSIOLOGY OF AUDITORY SYSTEM
Figure 3 The central vestibular system
Copyright © 2004 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Figure 5 Vestibular lesions manifesting with ocular tilt reaction
2/19/20192/19/20192/19/20192/19/20192/19/20192/19/20192/19/20192/19/20192/19/2019.
Figure 1 The head thrust test The head thrust test is a test of vestibular function that is performed as part of the bedside examination. The head thrust.
Brain stem.
Laboratory for Physiology EOG
Physiology of spinal cord
Physiology of Vestibular system and Equilibrium
Eye Movements.
Copyright © 2004 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
THALAMUS Lecture 4.
SHB 2019 Vestibular System Robert J. Frysztak, Ph.D.
Presentation transcript:

Vestibular syndromes in roll plane: graviceptive pathways from otoliths and vertical semicircular canals (SCCs) mediating vestibular function in roll plane. The projections from the otoliths and the vertical semicircular canals to the ocular motor nuclei (trochlear nucleus IV, oculomotor nucleus III, abducens nucleus VI), the supranuclear centers of the interstitial nucleus of Cajal (INC), and the rostral interstitial nucleus of the medial longitudinal fasciculus (riMLF) are shown. They subserve the vestibulo-ocular reflex (VOR) in three planes. The VOR is part of a more complex vestibular reaction that also involves vestibulospinal connections via the medial and lateral vestibulospinal tracts for head and body posture control. Furthermore, connections to the assumed vestibular cortex (areas 2v and 3a and the parietoinsular vestibular cortex [PIVC]) via the vestibular nuclei of the thalamus (Vim, Vce) are depicted. “Graviceptive” vestibular pathways for the roll plane cross at the pontine level. Ocular tilt reaction (OTR) (skew torsion, head tilt, and tilt of perceived vertical, subjective visual vertical [SVV]) is depicted schematically on the right in relation to the level of the lesion: ipsiversive OTR with peripheral and pontomedullary lesions; contraversive OTR with pontomesencephalic lesions. In vestibular thalamic lesions, the tilts of SVV may be contraversive or ipsiversive; in vestibular cortex lesions, they are preferably contraversive. OTR is not induced by supratentorial lesions above the level of INC.3 Source: Vestibular Lesions of the Central Vestibular Pathways, Vestibular Rehabilitation Citation: Herdman SJ, Clendaniel RA. Vestibular Rehabilitation; 2014 Available at: http://fadavispt.mhmedical.com/DownloadImage.aspx?image=/data/books/1878/herdvest_fig-5-03.png&sec=140995667&BookID=1878&ChapterSecID=140995642&imagename= Accessed: November 09, 2017 Copyright © 2017 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved