Assessment Of Auditory Vestibular Pathways Flashcards

0
Q

What are characteristics of the lateral vestibular spinal tract (LVST)?

A
  • Afferent source is entire labyrinth
  • Nucleus lateral vestibular nucleus
  • Functions to postural changes to compensate for tilts and movements of the body
  • efferent connection is ipsilateral
  • adjustment of posterior limbs
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1
Q

What does the vestibulospinal reflex do?

A

Maintaining the head In an upright position during movement

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2
Q

What are characteristics of the MVST?

A
  • afferent source is semicircular canals
  • nucleus is the medial and descending vestibular nuclei to the MLF
  • stabilize head when walking
  • bilateral
  • Excitatory and inhibitory
  • relaxation of upper back and neck muscles
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3
Q

What are some characteristics of the VOR?

A

Dolls eyes, the eye stays in position when the head is moving
If you move your head in one direction your eyes will move in the opposite direction, adjust eye position

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4
Q

How can you see the VOR?

A

Cortical control has to be suppressed or eliminated

VOR is slow compared to cortex

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5
Q

What are the steps to the VOR?

A
  1. Turn your head to the left
  2. Get depolarization on the left and hyperpolarization on the left
    (If you lesion the right you get depolarization of the left)
  3. Get excitatory on the left VN, inhibitory on the right
  4. Excitation on the left excited the left occularmotor nucleus and the right abducens nucleus to get contraction of the left medial rectus and right lateral rectus
  5. Inhibition of the opposite muscles
  6. Eyes go right
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6
Q

What happens where your cortex and VOR are competing where your eye should be?

A

Nystagmus
VOR moves your eye slow (pursuit)
Cortex moves your eye fast (saccade)
Can provoke

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7
Q

What is the caloric test?

A

If you inject cold water into one ear you get the opposite side nystagmus. If warm you get same side nystagmus

If you get pursuit only, you have a cortex lesion
If you get neither you have a brainstem lesion
Tilt the head to isolate the horizontal canal

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8
Q

How do you distinguish conductive(external/middle ear) and sensory neuro(hair cells, auditory nerve, cochlear nucleus) hearing loss?

A

Rime and weber test

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9
Q

What is the most common CNS auditory hearing loss?

A

“Cocktail party” effect
Inferior colliculus
Have a hard time distinguishing noise and important sounds
Processing disorder

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10
Q

What are the two ways to access an audio gram?

A

Absolute - same for all frequencies, 0-140 dB (worse is top)

Relative - mapped relative to normal (worse is bottom)

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11
Q

What is profound hearing loss and normal?

A

Above 80 dB is profound hearing loss

Above 25 is normal (not dB?)

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12
Q

What is the normal audio gram?

A

Air conduction gives lower thresholds than bone conduction

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13
Q

What is conductive hearing loss?

A

Injury to the middle of external ear

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14
Q

What symbols represent bone and air conduction?

A

Air conduction - circles for rt ear, X for right

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15
Q

What do you see in an audio gram for conductive and sensory neuro hearing loss?

A

In conductive, bone is better than air conduction

In sensory neuro, both are low

16
Q

What does the rinne test, test for?

A

Conductive hearing loss and sensory neuro
Difference in hearing on both sides

Bone versus air conduction

17
Q

What is the weber test?

A

Tests for Lateralizarion

Localizes side of defect

18
Q

What do acoustic reflex tests test for?

A

Middle ear problems

And brainstem function

19
Q

What information does the rinne test give?

A

On the middle ear

20
Q

What do you need to be function in weber test?

A

Middle ear
Cochlea
Superior olivary nucleus