The neurovestibular challenges of astronauts and balance patients: some past countermeasures and two alternative approaches to elicitation, assessment and mitigation

Astronauts and vestibular patients face analogous challenges to orientation function due to adaptive exogenous (weightlessness-induced) or endogenous (pathology-induced) alterations in the processing of acceleration stimuli. Given some neurovestibular similarities between these challenges, both affe...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ben Lawson, Angus Rupert, Braden McGrath
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2016-11-01
Series:Frontiers in Systems Neuroscience
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnsys.2016.00096/full
id doaj-32d8777f33b44a16a8274662875ba028
record_format Article
spelling doaj-32d8777f33b44a16a8274662875ba0282020-11-24T22:27:53ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Systems Neuroscience1662-51372016-11-011010.3389/fnsys.2016.00096184637The neurovestibular challenges of astronauts and balance patients: some past countermeasures and two alternative approaches to elicitation, assessment and mitigationBen Lawson0Angus Rupert1Braden McGrath2U.S. Army Aeromedical Research LaboratoryU.S. Army Aeromedical Research LaboratoryUniversity of CanberraAstronauts and vestibular patients face analogous challenges to orientation function due to adaptive exogenous (weightlessness-induced) or endogenous (pathology-induced) alterations in the processing of acceleration stimuli. Given some neurovestibular similarities between these challenges, both affected groups may benefit from shared research approaches and adaptation measurement/improvement strategies. This paper reviews various past strategies and introduces two plausible ground-based approaches, the first of which is a method for eliciting and assessing vestibular adaptation-induced imbalance. Second, we review a strategy for mitigating imbalance associated with vestibular pathology and fostering readaptation. In discussing the first strategy (for imbalance assessment), we review a pilot study wherein imbalance was elicited (among healthy subjects) via an adaptive challenge that caused a temporary/reversible disruption. The surrogate vestibular deficit was caused by a brief period of movement-induced adaptation to an altered (rotating) gravitoinertial frame of reference. This elicited adaptation and caused imbalance when head movements were made after reentry into the normal (non-rotating) frame of reference. We also review a strategy for fall mitigation, viz., a prototype tactile sway feedback device for aiding balance/recovery after disruptions caused by vestibular pathology. We introduce the device and review a preliminary exploration of its effectiveness in aiding clinical balance rehabilitation (discussing the implications for healthy astronauts). Both strategies reviewed in this paper represent cross-disciplinary research spin-offs: the ground-based vestibular challenge and tactile cueing display were derived from aeromedical research to benefit military aviators suffering from flight simulator-relevant aftereffects or inflight spatial disorientation, respectively. These strategies merit further evaluation using clinical and astronaut populations.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnsys.2016.00096/fullOrientationVertigobalancevestibulartactilesway
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ben Lawson
Angus Rupert
Braden McGrath
spellingShingle Ben Lawson
Angus Rupert
Braden McGrath
The neurovestibular challenges of astronauts and balance patients: some past countermeasures and two alternative approaches to elicitation, assessment and mitigation
Frontiers in Systems Neuroscience
Orientation
Vertigo
balance
vestibular
tactile
sway
author_facet Ben Lawson
Angus Rupert
Braden McGrath
author_sort Ben Lawson
title The neurovestibular challenges of astronauts and balance patients: some past countermeasures and two alternative approaches to elicitation, assessment and mitigation
title_short The neurovestibular challenges of astronauts and balance patients: some past countermeasures and two alternative approaches to elicitation, assessment and mitigation
title_full The neurovestibular challenges of astronauts and balance patients: some past countermeasures and two alternative approaches to elicitation, assessment and mitigation
title_fullStr The neurovestibular challenges of astronauts and balance patients: some past countermeasures and two alternative approaches to elicitation, assessment and mitigation
title_full_unstemmed The neurovestibular challenges of astronauts and balance patients: some past countermeasures and two alternative approaches to elicitation, assessment and mitigation
title_sort neurovestibular challenges of astronauts and balance patients: some past countermeasures and two alternative approaches to elicitation, assessment and mitigation
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Systems Neuroscience
issn 1662-5137
publishDate 2016-11-01
description Astronauts and vestibular patients face analogous challenges to orientation function due to adaptive exogenous (weightlessness-induced) or endogenous (pathology-induced) alterations in the processing of acceleration stimuli. Given some neurovestibular similarities between these challenges, both affected groups may benefit from shared research approaches and adaptation measurement/improvement strategies. This paper reviews various past strategies and introduces two plausible ground-based approaches, the first of which is a method for eliciting and assessing vestibular adaptation-induced imbalance. Second, we review a strategy for mitigating imbalance associated with vestibular pathology and fostering readaptation. In discussing the first strategy (for imbalance assessment), we review a pilot study wherein imbalance was elicited (among healthy subjects) via an adaptive challenge that caused a temporary/reversible disruption. The surrogate vestibular deficit was caused by a brief period of movement-induced adaptation to an altered (rotating) gravitoinertial frame of reference. This elicited adaptation and caused imbalance when head movements were made after reentry into the normal (non-rotating) frame of reference. We also review a strategy for fall mitigation, viz., a prototype tactile sway feedback device for aiding balance/recovery after disruptions caused by vestibular pathology. We introduce the device and review a preliminary exploration of its effectiveness in aiding clinical balance rehabilitation (discussing the implications for healthy astronauts). Both strategies reviewed in this paper represent cross-disciplinary research spin-offs: the ground-based vestibular challenge and tactile cueing display were derived from aeromedical research to benefit military aviators suffering from flight simulator-relevant aftereffects or inflight spatial disorientation, respectively. These strategies merit further evaluation using clinical and astronaut populations.
topic Orientation
Vertigo
balance
vestibular
tactile
sway
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnsys.2016.00096/full
work_keys_str_mv AT benlawson theneurovestibularchallengesofastronautsandbalancepatientssomepastcountermeasuresandtwoalternativeapproachestoelicitationassessmentandmitigation
AT angusrupert theneurovestibularchallengesofastronautsandbalancepatientssomepastcountermeasuresandtwoalternativeapproachestoelicitationassessmentandmitigation
AT bradenmcgrath theneurovestibularchallengesofastronautsandbalancepatientssomepastcountermeasuresandtwoalternativeapproachestoelicitationassessmentandmitigation
AT benlawson neurovestibularchallengesofastronautsandbalancepatientssomepastcountermeasuresandtwoalternativeapproachestoelicitationassessmentandmitigation
AT angusrupert neurovestibularchallengesofastronautsandbalancepatientssomepastcountermeasuresandtwoalternativeapproachestoelicitationassessmentandmitigation
AT bradenmcgrath neurovestibularchallengesofastronautsandbalancepatientssomepastcountermeasuresandtwoalternativeapproachestoelicitationassessmentandmitigation
_version_ 1725748563039748096