Abstract
Benign paroxysmal positional vertigo (BPPV) is assumed to result from utricular damage, but it is controversial if patients have manifest utricular dysfunction. Therefore, we investigated linear vestibulo-ocular reflexes (LVORs) during lateral whole-body translation in 14 patients with unilateral BPPV. Patients were subjected to linear acceleration steps of 0.24 g along the interaural axis, which were applied randomly to the left and right, both in the dark and in the light with a visual target at a distance of 60 cm. The LVOR was measured by EOG from the slow phase velocity of the averaged and desaccaded compensatory eye movement. In normal cases, maximum asymmetry of LVOR velocity was 13% in the dark and 10% in the light. In patients, LVOR velocities were normal in the dark but mildly reduced in the light (p < 0.05). Five patients had mild LVOR asymmetries in the dark (range 18-38%) and two in the light (11 and 13%), but there was no consistent relationship to the affected side. The absence of gross changes of the LVOR may be explained either by minor utricular damage that is functionally irrelevant or by central compensation of a chronic unilateral deficit.