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      Pre-operative vestibular pattern and balance compensation after vestibular schwannoma surgery.

      Neuroscience
      Adult, Aged, Caloric Tests, methods, Disability Evaluation, Female, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Middle Aged, Neuroma, Acoustic, complications, surgery, Neurosurgical Procedures, adverse effects, Postoperative Complications, diagnosis, physiopathology, Postural Balance, physiology, Recovery of Function, Vestibular Diseases, etiology, Vestibular Function Tests, Vestibular Nerve, pathology

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          Abstract

          This longitudinal study aimed to assess the sensorimotor balance strategies before and after vestibular schwannoma (VS) surgery according to the degree of pre-operative vestibular lesion. Thirty-eight VS patients were split in three groups according to caloric vestibular test results before surgery; nine had a symmetrical vestibular response (vestibular normoreflexy), 19 with a decreased response of more than 20% of the affected side (vestibular hyporeflexy) and 10 with an absent caloric response on the side of the affected labyrinth (vestibular areflexy). They underwent pendular rotary vestibular testing (RVT), allowing to evaluate gain and directional preponderance of the vestibulo-ocular reflex, and a sensory organisation test (SOT), evaluating balance control in six conditions (C1 to C6). These tests were performed shortly before, and 8 and 90 days after surgery. Directional preponderance performances of patients with vestibular normoreflexy or hyporeflexy followed a classical time-course with a huge asymmetry just after surgery and a recovery to pre-operative performances at 90 days; patients with vestibular areflexy were relatively stable in time. Variation in SOT performances of patients with vestibular normoreflexy, especially in the more complex C4 to C6, followed a classical time-course with an important postural degradation just after surgery and a recovery to pre-operative performances at 90 days. Patients with vestibular areflexy showed no balance degradation just after surgery and a marked increase in performances at 90 days after surgery, especially in C5 and C6. Performances of patients with vestibular hyporeflexy were intermediate, close to performances of patients with vestibular normoreflexy before surgery and close to performances of patients with vestibular areflexy at 8 and 90 days after surgery. Pre-operative vestibular function alteration triggers an adaptive process, characterized by a restoration of the symmetry of the vestibular nuclei activity and by sensory substitution and new behavioural strategies, allowing the anticipation of unilateral vestibular deafferentation effects. Copyright © 2011 IBRO. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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