Vestibular PREHAB and gentamicin before schwannoma surgery may improve long-term postural function
- 1Department of Otorhinolaryngology, Head and Neck Surgery, Lund University Hospital, Lund, Sweden
- 2Department of Neurosurgery, Clinical Sciences, Lund University Hospital, Lund, Sweden
- Correspondence to Dr F Tjernström, Department of Otorhinolaryngology, Head and Neck Surgery, Clinical Sciences, ENT Clinic, University Hospital Lund, Lund 22185, Sweden; fredrik.tjernstrom{at}med.lu.se
- Received 18 December 2008
- Revised 25 May 2009
- Accepted 19 June 2009
- Published Online First 1 July 2009
Abstract
Background: Unilateral vestibular deafferentation (uVD), as performed in vestibular schwannoma surgery, results in a chronic vestibular deficit, though most of the insufficiency can be compensated by other sensory input. By vestibular training (prehabituation) performed before surgery, motor adaptation processes can be instigated before the actual lesion. The adaptation processes of the altered sensory input could be affected if the vestibular ablation and surgery were separated in time, by pretreating patients who have remaining vestibular function with gentamicin.
Objective: To determine whether presurgical deafferentation would affect postsurgery postural control also in a long-term perspective (6 months).
Method: 41 patients subjected to trans-labyrinthine schwannoma surgery were divided into four groups depending on the vestibular activity before surgery (with no clinical significant remaining function n = 17; with remaining function n = 8), whether signs of central lesions were present (n = 10), and if patients with remaining vestibular activity were treated with gentamicin with the aim to produce uVD before surgery (n = 6). The vibratory posturography recordings before surgery and at the follow-up 6 months after surgery were compared.
Results: The subjects pretreated with gentamicin had significantly less postural sway at the follow-up, both compared with the preoperative recordings and compared with the other groups.
Conclusion: The results indicate that by both careful sensory training and separating the surgical trauma and the effects of uVD in time, adaptive processes can develop more efficiently to resolve sensory conflicts, resulting in a reduction of symptoms not only directly after surgery but also perhaps up to 6 months afterwards.
Footnotes
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Competing interests None.
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Ethics approval Ethics approval was provided by the local ethical committe, Lund University Hospital.
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Provenance and Peer review Not commissioned; externally peer reviewed.









