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What visuospatial perception has taught us about the pathophysiology of vestibular migraine

Qadeer Arshad, David Moreno‐Ajona, Peter J. Goadsby, Amir Kheradmand

2023Current Opinion in Neurology12 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

PURPOSE OF REVIEW: A decade has passed since vestibular migraine (VM) was formally established as a clinical entity. During this time, VM has emerged amongst the most common cause of episodic vertigo. Like all forms of migraine, VM symptoms are most prominent during individual attacks, however many patients may also develop persistent symptoms that are less prominent and can still interfere with daily activities. RECENT FINDINGS: Vestibular inputs are strongly multimodal, and because of extensive convergence with other sensory information, they do not result in a distinct conscious sensation. Here we review experimental evidence that supports VM symptoms are linked to multisensory mechanisms that control body motion and position in space. SUMMARY: Multisensory integration is a key concept for understanding migraine. In this context, VM pathophysiology may involve multisensory processes critical for motion perception, spatial orientation, visuospatial attention, and spatial awareness.

Topics & Concepts

Vestibular systemMigraineMultisensory integrationPerceptionContext (archaeology)PsychologySensationSpatial disorientationNeuroscienceOrientation (vector space)Sensory systemCognitive psychologySomatosensory systemVertigoPhysical medicine and rehabilitationAudiologyMedicineComputer sciencePsychiatryBiologyMathematicsPaleontologySurgeryGeometrySimulationVestibular and auditory disordersTactile and Sensory InteractionsMultisensory perception and integration
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