4.3 Article

Increased visual dependence and otolith dysfunction with alcohol intoxication

Journal

NEUROREPORT
Volume 18, Issue 4, Pages 391-394

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1097/WNR.0b013e328013e3eb

Keywords

breath tests; ethanol; humans; otoliths; rod and frame test; subjective visual vertical and horizontal; utricle; vestibular function tests; visual field dependence-independence; visual perception

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dAlcohol intoxication affects the vestibular system and balance control in many ways. We have investigated how acute, moderate (blood alcohol concentrations of 0.06 +/- 0.01%), and high (0.10 +0.02%) alcohol intoxication affects the ability to perceive the visual horizontal and vertical and the visual field dependence measured with the rod and frame tests in 24 healthy participants. Alcohol ingestion impaired the ability to use gravitational vestibular cues when determining the visual vertical and horizontal, and caused increased visual field dependence. With conflicting gravitational and visual information, alcohol seems to promote a reweighting in balance control from a vestibular to a more visual dependency. Furthermore, the results indicate that alcohol intoxication at these levels start instigating a decompensation of minute subdinical vestibular asymmetries.

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