Otolith vestibular function appears to affect human hippocampal volume

Autor: Joyce Bosmans, Hanne Gommeren, Peter zu Eulenburg, Annick Gilles, Griet Mertens, Angelique Van Ombergen, Patrick Cras, Sebastiaan Engelborghs, Vincent Van Rompaey
Rok vydání: 2023
Popis: INTRODUCTIONRecent studies implicate the effect of vestibular loss on cognitive decline, including hippocampal volume loss. As hippocampal atrophy is an important biomarker of Alzheimer’s disease, exploring vestibular dysfunction as a risk factor for dementia and its role in hippocampal atrophy is of interest.METHODSHippocampal and whole-brain MRI volumes were compared in adults aged between 55 and 83 years: (1) to substantiate previous literature, bilateral vestibulopathy (BV) was compared to healthy controls, (2) to correct for a potential confounding effect of concomitant hearing loss, BV was compared to healthy controls matched on age, sex, and hearing status, (3) to additionally evaluate the isolated effect of hearing loss on brain structure, sensorineural hearing loss (SNHL) was compared to healthy controls. Furthermore, to delineate otolith influence on hippocampal volume in preserved vestibular function (healthy controls and SNHL combined), saccular function was investigated.RESULTSWhole-brain and targeted hippocampal approaches using volumetric and surface-based measures yielded no significant differences in either of three comparisons: (1) BV versus controls, (2) BV versus matched controls, and (3) SNHL versus controls. Binary support vector machines were unable to classify inner ear health status above chance level. Otolith parameters were significantly associated with hippocampal volume in preserved vestibular function.CONCLUSIONNo significant differences in whole-brain or hippocampal volume were found when comparing BV with healthy controls, nor did concomitant SNHL confound this relationship. Otolith function may be associated with hippocampal volume rather than lateral semicircular canal integrity. Future BV studies should generally incorporate otolith function testing.Key pointsRecent research suggests an association between vestibular function and cognition.Hippocampal atrophy is an important biomarker of Alzheimer’s disease.Bilateral vestibular loss did not modulate hippocampal or whole-brain volume.Otolith function may influence hippocampal volume.Future vestibular research should incorporate otolith function testing.
Databáze: OpenAIRE