Department of Neurology, Johannes Gutenberg-University, Mainz, , 1 Department of Nuclear Medicine, Technical University Munich, , 2 Department of Neurology, Ludwig-Maximilians-University, Munich and , 3 Department of Nuclear Medicine, Johannes Gutenberg-University, Mainz, Germany
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Abstract |
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Introduction |
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Current approaches that correlate brain structure and vestibular function include blood flow measurements with single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) (Friberg et al., 1985; Takeda et al., 1996
), functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) (Lobel et al., 1998
; Bense et al., 2001
; Suzuki et al., 2001
) and positron emission tomography (PET) (Bottini et al., 1994
, 2001
; Wenzel et al., 1996
). Of these attempts to delineate the several human vestibular cortex areas to date, PET activation studies with caloric irrigation and fMRI activation studies with galvanic stimulation at the mastoid level have yielded the most detailed information. Bottini and co-workers (Bottini et al., 1994
), using caloric irrigation with iced water, were the first to demonstrate widespread activation in only the contralateral temporo-parietal junction, the posterior insula, the putamen and the anterior cingulate cortex, as well as the primary sensory cortex. Their data were based on caloric irrigation of one ear using painfully iced water. Recently, more distinct and separate activations in fMRI could be delineated during galvanic (electric) stimulation (Lobel et al., 1998
; Bense et al., 2001
) or caloric irrigation (Suzuki et al., 2001
) of both vestibular nerves. By this means, a network of cortical areas similar to that found in monkeys was detected. This network included areas in the parieto-occipital-temporal region of the parietal cortex (area 7), the insula and retroinsular regions (PIVC and VTS), the superior parietal lobe (possibly area 2v), the intraparietal sulcus, the central sulcus and the frontal premotor cortex. The areas were distributed in both hemispheres, but there was probably a predominance of the temporo-parietal areas of the right hemisphere in the right-handed normal subjects (Bense et al., 2001
), especially of intraparietal sulcus activation (Suzuki et al., 2001
). This seems to be in contrast to the mainly contralateral activation described by Bottini and co-workers (Bottini et al., 1994
). However, due to the methodological limitations of bilateral galvanic stimulation (Bense et al., 2001
), which did not allow analysis of the activation pattern during stimulation of one vestibular nerve, some open questions deserved further clarification, especially those with respect to hemispheric dominance:
Therefore, we studied the activation pattern during vestibular irrigation of the right or left ear with non-painful warm water (44°C) in 12 right-handed and 12 left-handed healthy volunteers.
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Materials and Methods |
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Twelve healthy right-handed volunteers aged 3061 years (mean age 42.4 years, three women and nine men) and 12 healthy male volunteers with pronounced left-handedness aged 1943 years (mean age 27.6 years) participated in the study. None of the subjects had any history or complaints of neurological or otoneurological dysfunction. The Laterality Quotient for right-handedness according to the 10-item inventory of the Edinburgh test (Oldfield, 1971; Salmaso and Longoni, 1985
) was +100 in 10 of the 12 right-handed volunteers, +80 in one and +60 in the other one. The Laterality Quotient for left-handedness was -100 in 10 and -80 in two of the 12 left-handed volunteers. In accordance with the Declaration of Helsinki, all subjects gave their informed written consent to participate in the study, after the experimental procedure and radiation risks had been explained. The experiment had the approval of the Ethics Committee of the Technical University Munich and the Radiation Safety Authorities.
Caloric Irrigation and Electro-oculography
Vestibular stimulation was performed by irrigating the right or left ear canals with 100 ml of warm water at 44°C for ~50 s. A 100 ml syringe was used in conjunction with a flexible plastic tube placed in the external auditory meatus of each ear. The head was slightly elevated (20°) for optimum stimulation of the horizontal canal. To monitor the effects, the horizontal DC electro-oculogram was recorded with the help of two cup electrodes placed at the lateral canthi of each eye (ground electrode over the glabella). For calibration purposes, the subject was asked to look at targets 0 or 20° to the left and 20° to the right. The subjects kept their eyes closed during the control condition and during and after caloric irrigation. The slow phase velocity (SPV) of the caloric nystagmus was analysed at the end of caloric irrigation and during the scanning period. After the scans, the subjects were asked to comment on their perception of motion. The subjective strength of the vestibular sensation was quantified by determining the perceived intensity of body rotation on a visual analogue scale (VAS, 010).
Experimental Setup
The 12 right-handed and 12 left-handed healthy volunteers were tested with eyes closed during vestibular stimulation by irrigating the right or left ear canals with 100 ml of warm water at 44°C for 50 s. The control condition was a rest condition defined as lying supine with eyes closed and without stimulation.
PET Scanning and Data Acquisition
PET measurements were performed using a Siemens 951 R/31 PET scanner (CTI, Knoxville TN) with a total axial field of view of 10.5 cm and no inter-plane dead space. In this field of view, the brain areas covered in all subjects extended from the vertex to the upper cerebellum. Attenuation correction was performed on an individual basis using a transmission scan with an external 68Ge/68Ga ring source acquired prior to the tracer injection.
The emission data were sampled in 3D mode for each subject under the three conditions mentioned above: irrigation of one ear (B), of the other ear (C) and the absence of such stimulation (A). Each condition was repeated up to four times (typical configuration ABCCBAACBBCA). The initial stimulation condition was thus varied in random order. To measure regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF), 10.0 mCi 15O-labelled water were administered using a semibolus technique described previously (Drzezga et al., 2001). To avoid the influence of nonvestibular effects of caloric stimulation (nociceptive, somatosensory and acoustic sensations), scans, which were sampled for 50 s, started 25 s after irrigation ended. Previous tests had revealed that nystagmus is still prominent at this time, but sensory sensations had already disappeared. A 10 min interval between the scans allowed for decay of radioactivity. The subjects were comfortably positioned on the scanner table to reduce movement artefacts during the relatively long scanning procedure (~3.5 h). Before each PET scan, the position of the subjects head was checked by laser pointer and position markers.
Image Analysis
Image analysis was performed on an UltraSPARC workstation (Sun Microsystems), using commercial interactive image display software and MATLAB (The MathWorks Inc., Natick, MA) for calculations and image matrix manipulations. To derive maps of significant blood flow changes on a pixelwise basis, statistical parametric mapping software (SPM99b; Wellcome Department of Cognitive Neurology, London, UK) was used (Friston et al., 1995b).
After corrections for randoms, dead time and scatter, images were reconstructed by filtered back-projection with a Hanning filter (cut-off frequency 0.4 cycles/projection element), which resulted in 31 slices with a 128 x 128 pixel matrix (pixel size = 2.0 mm) and interplane separation of 3.375 mm. To correct for head movements between the scans, the images were realigned using the first image as a reference and subsequently spatially normalized (Friston et al., 1995a) into a stereotaxic space using a representative brain from the Montreal Neurological Institute (MNI) as template. After normalization, the set of aligned images of each subject was compatible with the coordinate system proposed by Talairach and Tournoux (Talairach and Tournoux, 1988
; Frackowiak et al., 1997
). To eliminate individual differences in gyral anatomy and brain size, as well as to supply a meaningful statistical comparison of regional signal changes across the groups, these images were further smoothed using an isotropic Gaussian kernel of 12 mm (FWHM).
To remove effects induced by variations in global flow across subjects and scans, an analysis of covariance (ANCOVA) was applied with global flow as the confounding variable (Friston et al., 1995b). These adjusted rCBF voxel values were used for subsequent statistical analysis. Comparisons across stimulus conditions (calorics right or left) and baseline were made by Gaussionized t-statistics. Contrasts of parameter estimates were computed for each subject and written out as contrast images for the positive as well as for the negative signal changes (SPM manual page). Statistical parametric maps were created for each group of subjects by entering the contrast images from the first-level statistics into a t-test; this yielded a random effects model that allows inference to the general population (Frison and Popcock, 1992
; Woods, 1996
). Each resulting voxel set constitutes an SPM(t) map.
To implement a second-level analysis of laterality effects (hemispheric dominance), the subject-specific contrast images were flipped across the midline. Then, the flipped and non-flipped images were entered as two groups into a paired t-test. To test for jointly activated areas during right and left-sided caloric irrigation within one subject group (conjunction analysis), we entered contrasts for the two groups as different effects at the second level and performed a conjunction of contrasts testing for each alone (simple regression analysis).
On the basis of previous studies (Bottini et al., 1994; Wenzel et al., 1996
; Bense et al., 2001
), an anatomically constrained hypothesis was used and signal changes within the presumed vestibular and visual network (including posterior insular cortex), which were significant at P < 0.001 and not corrected for multiple comparisons, are reported throughout the paper. Similar hypothesis-driven approaches with identical thresholds have been applied in several other PET-imaging studies for their potential of reducing false negative findings (Spence et al., 1997
; Boecker et al., 1999
).
To define the anatomical sites of activation and deactivation clusters, MNI coordinates as well as defined anatomical landmarks (Naidich and Brightbill, 1996; Stephan et al. 1997
; Yousry et al. 1997
) and the atlas of Talairach and Tournoux (Talairach and Tournoux, 1988
) were used. There is still no internationally agreed upon definition of insular and retroinsular regions available in the literature. The insula was anatomically divided into five gyri; three short (IIII) and two long insular gyri (IV, V) (Bense et al., 2001
). The region frontal to the central insular sulcus was defined as the anterior insula; it includes the short insular gyri (IIII). The region posterior to the central insular sulcus was defined as the posterior insula; it includes the first (IV) and second (V) long insular gyrus. The retroinsular territory was defined as the area posterior to the second long insular gyrus.
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Results |
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Warm-water vestibular stimulation of the right ear caused a sensation of being tilted toward the left side and a caloric nystagmus to the left (direction of slow phase), with a mean slow phase velocity of 17.8°/s (SD = 7.7°/s). Regional blood flow increases were found in the right hemisphere in the following areas: a larger cluster (2386 voxels) covered the inferior posterior (long insular gyrus IV) and adjacent anterior insula (short insular gyrus III), the putamen and the anterior insula (small parts of the short insular gyrus I) with the adjacent inferior frontal gyrus (BA 47); another cluster (1284 voxels) covered the postcentral gyrus (BA 40/42) and the inferior parietal lobule (BA 40). Further activations were located in the posterolateral and posteromedial thalamus, hippocampus, medial frontal gyrus (BA 9), superior parietal lobule (BA 40/7) and precuneus (BA 7) (see Table 1 and Figs 1
, 4
and 5
).
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Right-handed Volunteers, Caloric Irrigation of the Left Ear
Warm-water stimulation of the left ear caused a sensation of being tilted toward the opposite side and a caloric nystagmus during the scanning period to the right (direction of slow phase), with a mean slow phase velocity of 17.3°/s (SD = 5.4°/s). Areas significantly activated in the right hemisphere were in general smaller and less significant than those in the left hemisphere, except for the anterior cingulate gyrus (see Table 2 and Figs 1
, 4
and 5
). They were located in the retroinsular region, with the transverse temporal gyrus (Heschl; BA 41) and the adjacent superior temporal gyrus (BA 41), the putamen and the inferior parts of the posterior insula (long insular gyrus IV) at the border of the anterior insula (short insular gyrus III) centring around the central insular sulcus (485 voxels of the cluster). The cluster of highest significance (347 voxels) within the right hemisphere was in the anterior cingulate gyrus, which was contralateral to the irrigated ear.
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Compared to the activation pattern during caloric irrigation of the right ear, activated areas of the temporo-insular and parietal cortex were smaller in both hemispheres and more frequently located within the ipsilateral left than the right hemisphere. Only activations of the anterior cingulum were dominated in the right hemisphere. During vestibular stimulation of the left ear, this pattern appeared in some aspects to be a mirror-image of that elicited during vestibular stimulation of the right ear.
Left-handed Volunteers, Caloric Irrigation of the Left Ear
In the 12 healthy volunteers with left-handedness, stimulation of the ipsilateral left ear caused a caloric nystagmus to the right (direction of slow phase), with a mean slow phase velocity of 11.3°/s (SD = ±3.5°/s). This was associated with a strong activation of the left hemisphere which covered an area including the anterior insula (I and II short insular gyri), the adjacent inferior frontal gyrus (BA 45), putamen, anterior thalamus, the posterior insula (long insular gyri IV and V), the transverse temporal gyrus (Heschl) and the postcentral gyrus (BA 43/4; see Table 3 and Figs 1
, 4
and 5
). This large activation cluster appeared to have ~7104 voxels. A smaller and separate activation of the left postcentral gyrus was located more rostrally (BA 4). Another cluster of activation was seen in the left superior temporal gyrus (BA 42/22), the adjacent inferior parietal lobule (BA 40) and the supramarginal gyrus (BA 40/39). Frontal premotor activation also occurred predominantly on the left side, including the medial frontal gyrus (BA 6/8) with the frontal eye field and the superior frontal gyrus (BA 8). There was bilateral parietal activation, left more than right, in the precuneus (BA 7). Only cingulate activation was predominant in the right contralateral hemisphere and located in its anterior part with a maximum in BA 24 and at the border of the supplementary motor area (BA 6).
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Left-handed Volunteers, Caloric Irrigation of the Right Ear
Warm-water stimulation of the right ear induced a caloric nystagmus to the left (direction of slow phase; mean slow phase velocity = 10.3 ± 3.7°/s) and was associated with several activations in both hemispheres which were distinct and separate with a maximal cluster size of 576 voxels (T-value = 14.04). Compared to the activations of the left-handed subjects during left-sided stimulation with a maximum cluster size of 7104 voxels (T-value 21.60) in the temporo-insular region, the activation pattern here appeared somewhat regularly scattered within both hemispheres. The small areas of activation within the right hemisphere included the diagonal frontal gyrus (BA 6), the precentral gyrus at two sites (BA 6 and BA 4/6) with the adjacent superior temporal gyrus (BA 22) and medial parts of the insula, rostral parts of the posterior insula (V), the precuneus (BA 7), the cingulate gyrus (BA 32) and the superior frontal (BA 10 and BA 6) and medial frontal (BA 46) gyri. Subcortical activations were seen in the paramedian and anterior-median thalamus, putamen and caudate nucleus.
Similar locations were found for the activations in the left hemisphere: diagonal and superior frontal gyrus (BA 6 and BA 8), precuneus (BA 7), rostral parts of the posterior insula (V), superior temporal gyrus (BA 42), medial frontal gyrus (BA 9/46) with the adjacent anterior parts of the insula, cingulate gyrus (BA 32), medial frontal gyrus (BA 9) and inferior frontalprecentral gyri (BA 44/6). Subcortical activations were also located in the anterior-median thalamus and the putamen.
The most pronounced activation was in the left hemisphere with a T-value of 14.04 and the largest cluster size of 576 voxels and covered the left superior and diagonal frontal gyrus (BA 6). The most pronounced cortical activation of the right hemisphere was in the superior temporal gyrus (BA 42; voxel size 261). A summary is given in Table 4.
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To compare the activation pattern in the right and left hemispheres in each group of handedness, the subject-specific contrast images were flipped across the midline and then the flipped and non-flipped images were entered as two groups into a paired t-test.
Right-handed Volunteers: Calorics Right (Table 5 and Fig. 2
)
Activations were pronounced in the right hemisphere, which had a total number of ~1950 voxels in contrast to 732 voxels in the left hemisphere. The activations of the right hemisphere concentrated in the inferior frontal gyrus/anterior insula (BA 44/45 and BA 46), the superior frontal gyrus (BA 9/46), the medial frontal gyrus (BA 9/6/8), the inferior parietal lobule and supramarginal gyrus (BA 40) and the superior parietal lobule (BA 7), whereas activations of the left hemisphere centred mainly in the anterior cingulate gyrus (BA 24) and hippocampus.
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Activations occurred mainly in the left hemisphere (136 voxels in total). In the right hemisphere (a total of 42 voxels) only activity in the anterior cingulum (BA 24; T = 5.48; x = 10, y = 8, z = 34; 30 voxels) and the precuneus (BA 7) survived. The cluster with the highest number of 94 voxels was located in the left medial frontal gyrus (T = 5.48;38, 18, 30). Smaller activations were in the left diagonal frontal gyrus (BA 8/6) and the precentral gyrus (BA 6).
Left-handed Volunteers: Calorics Left (Table 5 and Fig. 2
)
The activations were pronounced in the left hemisphere of left-handed volunteers and totalled ~5000 voxels compared to 550 voxels within the right hemisphere. While the largest activation clusters within the right hemisphere appeared in the anterior cingulum (BA 32/24) and the occipital lobe (cuneus and medial occipital gyrus; BA 19/18), those within the left hemisphere centred in the posterior insula, the anterior insula/inferior frontal gyrus, superior frontal gyrus, superior temporal gyrus, inferior and superior parietal lobule, the precentral gyrus and the putamen.
Left-handed Volunteers: Calorics Right
Activation clusters were significantly smaller than with caloric irrigation of the left ear and frequently scattered over both hemispheres (total number of voxels in the right hemisphere was ~450 and in the left hemisphere ~550). The largest clusters were in the left hemisphere, located in the cuneus (BA 19; 173 voxels; T = 7.34; -12, -90, 28) and the anterior cingulum (BA 24; 97 voxels; T = 10.08; -8, 6, 28). Further left-sided activations were seen in the diagonal frontal gyrus (BA 9/32; 40 voxels; T = 7.11; -20, 38, 18), the lateral thalamus (41 voxels; T = 8.36; -20, -24, 18), upper parts of the posterior insula (30 voxels; T = 7.08; -30, -24, 18) and fronto-parietal areas such as the diagonal frontal gyrus (BA 6; 37 voxels; T = 6.43; -20, -18, 50).
In the right hemisphere, activations concentrated in the occipital gyrus (BA 19; 94 voxels; T = 8.21; 34, -78, 28), the cuneus (BA 19; 42 voxels; T = 11.59; 6, -70, 10), the inferior parietal lobule adjacent to the posterior insula (92 voxels; T = 10.09; 36, -12, 24), the superior frontal gyrus (BA 9; 80 voxels; T = 7.36; 14, 64, 30), inferior parts of the posterior insula (IV/V; 36 voxels; T = 6.01; 34, -6, -6), the precuneus (BA 7; 33 voxels; T = 5.28; 22, -70, 46), superior frontal gyrus (BA 8; 30 voxels; T = 7.31; 34, 36, 46) and the precentral gyrus (BA 6/44).
Conjunction Analysis
Right-handed Volunteers, Calorics Right versus Left (P < 0.05, Corrected for Multiple Comparisons; Fig. 3)
Activation areas that appeared under both conditions were located bilaterally in the posterior insula (III/IV right; IV/V left), the putamen, the superior temporal gyrus and inferior parietal lobule, as well as the right posterolateral thalamus and transverse temporal gyrus.
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Left-handed Volunteers, Calorics Right versus Left (P £ 0.001, Uncorrected; Fig. 3)
The largest clusters of activations under both conditions were found in the right anterior cingulum (BA 32; 832 voxels; T = 4.45; 10, 12, 42), the left inferior frontal gyrus (BA 44) with the adjacent superior temporal gyrus and anterior insula (831 voxels; T = 4.37; -58, 6, 32), the left superior temporal gyrus (BA 42/44; 415; T = 4.31; -58, -30, 12), the left (421; T = 3.57; -34, -26, 18) and right (294; T = 4.14; 34, -14, 22) upper parts of the posterior insula, the left medial frontal gyrus (BA 10; 324; T = 3.43; -32, 46, 22) and both diagonal frontal gyri (BA 6; T = 3.17; 10, 0, 64; T = 3.24; -12, 2, 70). Smaller activations occurred in the paramedian thalamus bilaterally, the left putamen and the left precuneus (BA 7).
Only the right anterior cingulum (T = 4.45), the left superior temporal gyrus (T = 4.37) and left inferior parietal lobule (T = 4.31), as well as the right posterior insula (T = 4.14) survived with a higher significance level (P < 0.05, corrected).
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Discussion |
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Anatomical Localization of Vestibular Cortex Areas in Humans during Vestibular Stimulation
The posterior parts of the insula appeared to be activated in the group analysis under all four stimulation conditions. This area represents the PIVC in humans. It was first described by Grüsser and co-workers (Grüsser et al., 1982, 1990a
,Grüsser et al., b
; Guldin and Grüsser, 1996
, 1998
) in several monkey species and corresponds to findings in feline studies (Jijiwa et al., 1991
). Indeed, clinical studies in patients with infarctions of the temporal lobe (Brandt et al. 1994
, 1995
) and activation studies in healthy subjects using vestibular or optokinetic stimuli (Bottini et al., 1994
; Bucher et al., 1997
; Dieterich et al., 1998
) indicate that the posterior insular and retroinsular regions contain the human homologue to the PIVC in monkeys.
During caloric irrigation, a widely distributed pattern of separate areas was activated, including not only the PIVC in the posterior insula, but also the anterior part of the insula, the adjacent superior temporal (BA 42) and transverse temporal gyri, the inferior parietal lobe (BA 40), the anterior cingulum (BA 32, 24), the precuneus (BA 7) and the precentral gyrus (BA 6). All these areas are part of the inner vestibular cortical circle and the core region of the PIVC, which has been electrophysiologically delineated (Guldin and Grüsser, 1996, 1998
) in different monkey species. These areas and other vestibular cortex areas such as 2v and 3aV respond to vestibular stimulation. Their neurons are all multisensory, i.e. they also receive visual and/or somatosensory input. They have been found to be intimately connected with each other and with the vestibular brainstem nuclei (Akbarian et al., 1993
, 1994
; Guldin et al., 1993
), where vestibular signals from the semicircular canals and otoliths converge (Angelaki et al., 1993
). The PIVC receives input from all these areas, thus enabling it to act as a centre for processing vestibular information as opposed to the concurrent visual (optokinetic) and somatosensory input (Guldin and Grüsser, 1996
, 1998
).
Does the localization of the calorically activated areas in humans match the cortical distribution of the multisensory vestibular cortex areas identified by single unit recordings in the monkey? In contrast to the precise knowledge of the cortical representation of the vestibular system in electrophysiological animal studies, human data are sparse. Lesion studies in patients with infarctions within the middle cerebral artery territory showed that the retroinsular region around the PIVC affects spatial orientation. Infarctions of this region regularly caused significant (mostly contra-versive) tilts of adjustments of the perceived visual vertical, best explained as cortical vestibular otolith dysfunction (Brandt et al., 1994; Dieterich and Brandt, 1996
). In exceptional cases, transient rotational vertigo was observed in acute infarctions that included this site (Brandt et al., 1995
). Earlier human activation studies using vestibular caloric irrigation and PET (Bottini et al., 1994
; Dieterich et al., 1996
) or vestibular galvanic stimulation at the mastoid level and fMRI (Bucher et al., 1998
) confirmed that this location was the presumed PIVC. Galvanic stimulation at the mastoid level stimulates both semicircular canals as well as otolith nerve fibres. It also elicits an activation focus in the first and/or second long insular gyrus (insular gyrus IV and V) of both hemispheres, as indicated by fMRI studies (Bucher et al., 1998
; Bense et al., 2001
). Thus, the human homologue of the PIVC was found with galvanic (whole vestibular nerve) and caloric (horizontal semicircular canal) stimulation.
Temporo-insular Activation
The temporo-insular activation in the current study extended anteriorly from the long insular gyri to the anterior insula and the adjacent inferior frontal gyrus and posteriorly to retroinsular regions and the superior temporal gyrus. Both areas agree with the activation patterns found in previous imaging studies during galvanic vestibular stimulation (Lobel et al., 1998; Bense et al., 2001
). The activated area in the anterior insula and the inferior frontal gyrus in these studies was attributed to simultaneous ocular motor responses mediated by the basal ganglia thalamo-cortical motor loop described previously (Alexander et al., 1986
). The latter was supported by fMRI studies on the differential effects of optokinetic stimulation, since this activity was also suppressed along with optokinetic nystagmus by fixating a stationary target in the centre of the optokinetic pattern (Dieterich et al., 1998
). Similarly, our current study with caloric irrigation as well as the study with optokinetic stimulation also found activity in the basal ganglia (putamen, caudate nucleus, substantia nigra) and the thalamus, which probably reflects the efferent motor loop.
Activations of the retroinsular region and the adjacent superior temporal gyrus or transverse temporal gyrus are compatible with a visual and optokinetic region, the visual posterior sylvian area (VPS or VTS), which was originally identified in the monkey (Guldin and Grüsser, 1998). This region was found to be located directly posterior to the PIVC. Because of their adjacent localization, the PIVC and the VPS may be difficult to separate in vestibular activation studies. According to monkey data, the PIVC is considered a vestibular region with optokinetic input and the VPS a visual and optokinetic region with vestibular input. About one-third of the VPS neurons were driven or modulated by vestibular stimuli (Guldin and Grüsser, 1998
).
Parietal Activations
Another neighbouring region of the complex of the PIVC and the VPS is area 7 in the inferior parietal lobule (BA 40), which also receives vestibular input in cats and monkeys (Faugier-Grimaud and Ventre, 1989; Guldin and Grüsser, 1998
). Parts of the inferior parietal lobule (BA 40) were also activated in the current study, as well as the cingulum and the precuneus (BA 7), all of which belong to the vestibular cortical circuit in the monkey (Guldin and Grüsser 1996
, 1998
). These data are compatible with some of the available imaging studies in humans (Bottini et al., 1994
; Vitte et al., 1996
; Bucher et al., 1998
; Lobel et al., 1998
; Bense et al., 2001
; Suzuki et al., 2001
), which allowed for separation of the activation clusters and described a network in the parieto-temporo-occipital junction of vestibularly driven cortex areas similar to that described in monkeys. Among the electrophysiologically determined multi-sensory vestibular areas, area 2v, which is located parietal at the anterior end of the intraparietal sulcus in monkeys (Akbarian et al., 1994
; Fredrickson et al., 1966
), was not activated in our study. In humans, this area is possibly involved in the control of saccadic eye movements and assigned to the parietal eye field (Müri et al., 1996
); it also plays a role in spatial attention during the control of eye movements (Kim et al., 1999
).
The activation of the precuneus (BA 7) in the inferior parietal cortex in our study agrees with monkey data that showed anatomic connections of the inferior parietal cortex (area 7) with subcortical structures related to vestibulo-ocular function (Ventre and Faugier-Grimaud, 1986; Faugier-Grimaud and Ventre, 1989
). The contribution of the cuneus/precuneus has also been demonstrated in visuo-spatial attention tasks (Corbetta et al., 1993
).
Frontal Activations
Activations of the frontal lobe were concentrated especially in the superior (BA 10/8) and medial (BA 9/8/6) frontal gyri, in the diagonal frontal gyrus (BA 6) and the inferior frontal gyrus (BA 44/6) adjacent to the more prominent precentral gyrus/sulcus (BA 6 caudally). Activation of the left inferior Brocas area (BA) 44/6 which extended into the neighbouring insula has been described during rhythm tasks (Platel et al., 1997). Activations in BA 44 and 6 were also reported by Lobel and co-workers (Lobel et al., 1998
) during galvanic vestibular stimulation and by Dieterich and co-workers (Dieterich et al., 1998
Dieterich et al., 2002) during optokinetic nystagmus. Since optokinetic nystagmus and different types of saccades elicited additional activations in rostral parts of the precentral sulcus, corresponding to the location of the frontal eye field (FEF) in the literature, a premotor function of this inferior frontal area has been discussed (Heide et al., 2001
; Dieterich et al., 2002). Earlier monkey data (Guldin and Grüsser, 1998
), which described a premotor area in area 6 that was tightly connected to the PIVC and the VPS, agree with this view. Our study also has to assume the presence of this premotor area, because the FEF expected in the vicinity of the precentral sulcus and at the depth of the caudal part of the superior frontal sulcus (Paus, 1996
; Petit et al., 1997
; Petit and Haxby, 1999
) was also activated. Activation of the FEF is due to the nystagmus elicited by caloric irrigation. Frontal activations might reflect either a feedback signal for the eye position and/or an involvement of spatial attention. In humans, acute lesions of the right dorsolateral prefrontal cortex induce visual neglect (Husain and Kennard, 1996
). In monkeys, neuronal activity in the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex was found to be related to saccadic eye movements and attentional tasks (Funahashi et al., 1991
).
Anterior Cingulate Activations
Larger activations were located in the anterior cingulum (BA 32, BA 24) predominantly in the hemisphere contralateral to the stimulated ear; the meaning of this lateralization remains unclear. Activations in the hippocampus and anterior cingulate cortex were described earlier during caloric irrigation with cold water (Vitte et al., 1996). This finding is in accordance with other vestibular imaging studies in humans using PET (Bottini et al., 1994
; Wenzel et al., 1996
) and fMRI (Lobel et al., 1998
; Bense et al., 2001
) and with monkey data (Guldin and Grüsser, 1996
, 1998
) in which the anterior cingulate cortex also belongs to the inner vestibular circuit. Activations of the anterior cingulate cortex were also reported to occur during visuo-spatial attention tasks (Corbetta et al., 1993
; Kim et al., 1999
). Conversely, rostral and caudal regions of the anterior cingulate cortex were activated in PET during oculomotor tasks (direction-specific saccades); their activation was combined with activation of the lateral prefrontal cortex (Paus et al., 1993
), which was also found in our study. This localization of task-specific changes of activity within the human anterior cingulate cortex is consistent with the known somatotopic organization of the cingulate cortex in monkeys and confirms the role of the anterior cingulate cortex in the control of motor responses (Paus et al., 1993
). Thus, further discussion of cortical and subcortical activations due to vestibular stimulation must bear in mind that perceptual, sensorimotor (ocular and body) and autonomic functions are involved.
Cortico-cortical and Cortico-subcortical Connections of Vestibular Cortex Areas
Neurophysiologically, the main input from the vestibular nuclei in the brainstem to the cortical PIVC in monkeys travels via the ventroposterior thalamic subnuclei, especially the posterior part of the ventroposterior nucleus and the medial pulvinar (Akbarian et al., 1992). Both areas, thalamus and midbrain, were activated in our study. These vestibular thalamic subnuclei in non-human primates are directly connected to three vestibular cortical regions the PIVC, area 2v (7ant) and the proprioceptive vestibular area 3aV and have strong bilateral interconnections (Guldin and Grüsser, 1996
). As mentioned previously, animal studies have identified several additional regions with strong bilateral connections to this inner vestibular cortical circle, namely the cingulate sulcus, the post arcuate area 6 (6pa), the granular insular region, parts of area 7 and a temporal region adjacent to the PIVC called the VPS or VTS (Guldin and Grüsser, 1996
, 1998
). The vestibular brainstem nuclei receive monosynaptic input from all the above-mentioned cortex regions and an area inside the cingular sulcus (Akbarian et al., 1993
, 1994
; Guldin et al., 1993
). Thus, the same cortical regions that have efferent connections to the PIVC also have efferent monosynaptic connections to the vestibular nuclei. These cortico-vestibular projections run to both the ipsilateral and contralateral vestibular brainstem nuclei. However, the contribution of ipsilateral and contralateral cortical areas varies for the different cortex areas (Guldin and Grüsser, 1996
). The PIVC, VTS and granular insula preferably project to and from the ipsilateral vestibular nuclei, whereas the premotor area 6, the somatosensory areas 3aV and 3aH, and area 2v have more pronounced projections to the contralateral vestibular nuclei (Akbarian et al., 1993
, 1994
; Guldin et al., 1993
). Thus, the ipsilateral projection to and from the PIVC and the adjacent VTS can explain one finding of our activation study during caloric irrigation: the importance of the side of the stimulated ear, i.e. the activation was stronger in the posterior insula ipsilateral to the stimulated ear.
Dominance of Vestibular Function of the Non-dominant Hemisphere
The cortex areas with vestibular input were activated bilaterally in all right-handed healthy volunteers, but there was a significant preponderance of the non-dominant right hemisphere in our study. The 12 healthy volunteers with strong left-handedness exhibited an analogous predominance of activation in their left hemisphere. The latter was not only evident in group analysis, but also in single subject analysis. Thus, the dominance for vestibular cortex activation of the non-dominant hemisphere is more regularly found than hemispheric transposition for Brocas area in left-handed subjects. It has been reported that 60% of the right-handed, but only 32% of the non-right-handed, developed aphasia after left hemisphere lesions (Benson and Geschwind, 1985). This finding contradicts that of the first PET study during vestibular stimulation (Bottini et al., 1994
), which found widespread activations in the temporo-parietal cortex during caloric irrigation in the hemisphere contralateral to the irrigated ear. However, this study did not systematically compare right and left ear irrigation in the same subject and used iced water for caloric irrigation. Such a painful stimulus probably led to a concurrent stimulation of the nociceptive and somatosensory systems in the contralateral hemisphere. This was confirmed by the finding that somatosensory areas of the perisylvian cortex, the temporo-parietal junction and somatosensory area II received signals from both sensory channels: the one was activated during caloric vestibular stimulation with iced water and the other, during mechanical vibration of posterior neck muscles (Bottini et al., 2001
).
A significant right hemispheric dominance for vestibular cortex areas in the temporo-insular-parietal region was reported earlier in an fMRI study using optokinetic stimulation (Dieterich et al., 1998). This dominance was also described in the dipole analysis of a magnetoencephalography study for the processing of sound-source lateralization (Kaiser et al., 2000
). The lateralized effects were localized bilaterally over the angular gyri and posterior temporal regions. During optokinetic stimulation, a right hemispheric dominance was also detected for cortical ocular motor areas (parietal cortex with PEF) and motion-sensitive areas (MT/MST), but not for the primary visual cortex (Dieterich et al., 1998
). This agrees with other paradigms showing right hemispheric predominance for the areas FEF and SMA during memory-guided saccades after a delay period, using PET (Sweeney et al., 1996
), for the PEF during visually guided saccades, using fMRI (Müri et al., 1996
) and for the middle frontal gyrus, which corresponds to Brodmanns area 46, in a spatial working memory task, using fMRI (McCarthy et al., 1996
). Similarly, PET activation in the anterior temporal lobe (midway along the superior temporal sulcus) was clearly stronger in the right hemisphere for selective attention during visual discrimination of shape, but not of speed and colour (Corbetta et al., 1991
) and in the infero-temporal cortex for several object recognition tasks (Corbetta et al., 1990
). Petrides and co-workers (Petrides et al., 1993
) reported strong right lateralization in the mid-dorsolateral frontal cortex (BA 46) when subjects were asked to point to spatially arranged designs. The latter task in our opinion requires vestibularly defined coordinates. Another PET study on attention (Pardo et al., 1991
) found predominant activation in the right prefrontal and superior parietal cortex independently of the laterality and modality of the sensory input. Finally, patients with chronic lateralized ongoing pain (painful mononeuropathy) showed a striking preferential activation of the right anterior cingulate cortex (BA 24), regardless of the side of the mononeuropathy, which suggests a right hemispheric lateralization for affective processing (Hsieh et al., 1995
).
Clinical lesion studies have shown a right hemispheric predominance in patients with parietal lesions that typically cause visuospatial hemineglect (Vallar and Perani, 1986). With respect to eye movements, smooth pursuit was more severely impaired in patients with lesions involving the right posterior parietal cortex and/or dorsolateral frontal cortex than the left (Lekwuwa and Barnes, 1996
). A clinical study on direction-specific pursuit defects and impairment of motion perception in unilateral hemispheric lesions found that two of three patients with left hemispheric lesions had bidirectional defects in motion discrimination, but none of the 21 patients with right-sided lesions had bidirectional deficits (Barton et al., 1996
). All these data are compatible with the model of Mesulam (Mesulam, 1981
, 1999
), which describes a network for representing and exploring space for which right-handed subjects have a right hemispheric dominance. On the whole, all these studies indicate that functionally significant right hemispheric dominance must be assumed for visuo-spatial orientation and attention, motion perception, saccadic and pursuit eye movements and, especially, for the processing of vestibular function. These functions have in common a multisensory and motor processing of spatial coordinates in three dimensions. The vestibular system with otolith and semicircular canal input is an important, integral part and, hence, is involved not only in the perception of body position and self-motion, but also in attention and the control of ocular motor, head and body movements (a dysfunction of which, for example, causes visuo-spatial hemineglect).
For all the above-discussed sensorimotor functions there are no studies available on left-handers. This makes it difficult to interpret the function of our finding of left hemispheric vestibular dominance in left-handers. The two functions sensorimotor control of fine finger and arm movements and spatial orientation with ocular motor and postural control are mediated in both hemispheres; however, their dominance seems to be organized in opposite hemispheres. Whereas orientation, ocular motor and postural control represent more ancient sensorimotor functions developed during evolution, speech and finger movements are more recent achievements. The preference of hemispheres may thus be a product of evolution. One could speculate that there are phylogenetic and ontogenetic determinants of hemispheric dominance. The ancient vestibular system matures earlier during ontogenetic development. This can be demonstrated by postural neck and vestibulo-ocular reflexes that are present shortly after birth. In contrast, handedness and language lateralization seem to develop a few years later. For example, left hemisphere lateralization of receptive language is present at the age of 8 years (Balsamo et al., 2002). There are two possible explanations for the opposite hemispherical dominance: first, that the side of dominance of the vestibular system determines later handedness during maturation of motor function in childhood or, secondly, that an as yet unknown constellation determines both handedness and vestibular hemispherical dominance in the two hemispheres. The dominance of vestibular cortical function should not be simply limited to the vestibular sense per se, but rather should be seen as part of a multisensory and sensorimotor cortical interaction to ensure the perception of gravity and motion and the maintenance of equilibrium. There is no primary vestibular cortex like the visual cortex. All vestibular cortical neurons identified electrophysiologically in monkeys also responded to other sensory and optokinetic stimuli (Grüsser et al., 1990a
,b
; Guldin and Grüsser, 1996
). The cytoarchitectonic structure of the vestibular cortex areas is also more typical of a multisensory or sensorimotor rather than a unimodal sensory cortex. Indeed, the vestibular cortex contributes to a complex multi-purpose network for detection, interpretation and motor reaction to changes in egocentric space.
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Address correspondence to Prof. Dr Marianne Dieterich, Department of Neurology, Johannes Gutenberg University of Mainz, Langen-beckstrasse 1, D-61377 Mainz, Germany. Email: dieterich{at}neurologie.klinik.uni-mainz.de.
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