TY - JOUR
T1 - Abnormal auditory neural networks in patients with right hemispheric infarction, chronic dizziness, and moyamoya disease
T2 - A magnetoencephalogram study
AU - Kandori, Akihiko
AU - Oe, Hiroshi
AU - Miyashita, Kotaro
AU - Date, Hiroshi
AU - Yamada, Naoaki
AU - Naritomi, Hiroaki
AU - Chiba, Yoshihide
AU - Miyashita, Tsuyoshi
AU - Tsukada, Keiji
N1 - Funding Information:
This study was supported by a Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research No. 13072601, Supported by the Ministry of Health, Labor and Welfare of Japan.
PY - 2002/11/1
Y1 - 2002/11/1
N2 - The purpose of this study was to determine whether the auditory cortex is sensitive to cortical insults and to determine the specificity of the insults in three clinical situations with different cortical involvement. Auditory-evoked magnetic fields of ten normal subjects, 8 patients with right hemispheric infarction, 11 with chronic dizziness, and 2 with moyamoya disease were measured. To analyze the abnormality of auditory neural networks, the magnitude ratio and the angle difference (Δθ) between response vectors, which were determined from maximum current arrows corresponding to the N100m peak for contralateral and ipsilateral stimuli were used. A normal range of the parameters was defined so that abnormal values could be determined. Of the three parameters, Δθ was the most sensitive: 4 patients with right hemispheric infarction, 4 with chronic dizziness, and 1 with moyamoya disease had abnormal Δθ. The electrical activity in the patients with such abnormal Δθs had a circular current pattern. These findings suggest that right infarction lesions sometime affect the left auditory neural network, dizziness is caused by abnormal neural networks between the vestibular cortical area and the auditory cortex or by an imbalance between left and right auditory-cortex activities, and moyamoya-disease patients have almost normal auditory-electrical activity.
AB - The purpose of this study was to determine whether the auditory cortex is sensitive to cortical insults and to determine the specificity of the insults in three clinical situations with different cortical involvement. Auditory-evoked magnetic fields of ten normal subjects, 8 patients with right hemispheric infarction, 11 with chronic dizziness, and 2 with moyamoya disease were measured. To analyze the abnormality of auditory neural networks, the magnitude ratio and the angle difference (Δθ) between response vectors, which were determined from maximum current arrows corresponding to the N100m peak for contralateral and ipsilateral stimuli were used. A normal range of the parameters was defined so that abnormal values could be determined. Of the three parameters, Δθ was the most sensitive: 4 patients with right hemispheric infarction, 4 with chronic dizziness, and 1 with moyamoya disease had abnormal Δθ. The electrical activity in the patients with such abnormal Δθs had a circular current pattern. These findings suggest that right infarction lesions sometime affect the left auditory neural network, dizziness is caused by abnormal neural networks between the vestibular cortical area and the auditory cortex or by an imbalance between left and right auditory-cortex activities, and moyamoya-disease patients have almost normal auditory-electrical activity.
KW - Auditory-evoked magnetic field
KW - Chronic dizziness
KW - Hemispheric infarction
KW - Magnetoencephalogram
KW - Magnetoencephalography
KW - Moyamoya disease
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U2 - 10.1016/S0168-0102(02)00147-5
DO - 10.1016/S0168-0102(02)00147-5
M3 - Article
C2 - 12413656
AN - SCOPUS:0036876941
SN - 0168-0102
VL - 44
SP - 273
EP - 283
JO - Neuroscience Research
JF - Neuroscience Research
IS - 3
ER -