1.Mal de debarquement: a case report.
Haiyan WU ; Suju WANG ; Wenyang HAO ; Zhiqiang GAO
Chinese Journal of Otorhinolaryngology Head and Neck Surgery 2014;49(12):1035-1036
Humans
;
Motion Sickness
;
diagnosis
;
Travel
2.Research Progress in Physiological Evaluation and Treatment of Visually Induced Motion Sickness in Virtual Reality.
Zhen-Qian SHEN ; Fei SUN ; Yao WANG ; Yong-Jun WANG
Acta Academiae Medicinae Sinicae 2023;45(6):980-986
Visually induced motion sickness(VIMS)is the major barrier to be broken in the development of virtual reality(VR)technology,which seriously affects the progress in the VR industry.Therefore,the detection and evaluation of VIMS has become a hot research topic nowadays.We review the progress in physiological assessment of VIMS in VR based on several physiological indicators,including electroencephalogram(EEG),postural sway,eye movements,heart rate variability,and skin electrical signals,and summarize the available therapies,aiming to provide an outlook on the future research directions of VIMS.
Humans
;
Motion Sickness/diagnosis*
;
Virtual Reality
;
Heart Rate
3.Vestibular testing abnormalities in individuals with motion sickness.
Yan MA ; Yongkang OU ; Ling CHEN ; Yiqing ZHENG
Journal of Clinical Otorhinolaryngology Head and Neck Surgery 2009;23(16):728-730
OBJECTIVE:
To evaluate the vestibular function of motion sickness.
METHOD:
VNG, which tests the vestibular function of horizontal semicircular canal, and CPT, which tests vestibulospinal reflex and judge proprioceptive, visual and vestibular status, were performed in 30 motion sickness patients and 20 healthy volunteers (control group). Graybiel score was recorded at the same time.
RESULT:
Two groups' Graybiel score (12.67 +/- 11.78 vs 2.10 +/- 6.23; rank test P<0.05), caloric test labyrinth value [(19.02 +/- 8.59) degrees/s vs (13.58 +/- 5.25) degrees/s; t test P<0.05], caloric test labyrinth value of three patients in motion sickness group exceeded 75 degrees/s. In computerized posturography testing (CPT), motion sickness patients were central type (66.7%) and disperse type (23.3%); all of control group were central type. There was statistical significance in two groups' CTP area, and motion sickness group was obviously higher than control group. While stimulating vestibulum in CPT, there was abnormality (35%-50%) in motion sickness group and none in control group. Generally evaluating CPT, there was only 2 proprioceptive hypofunction, 3 visual hypofunction, and no vestibular hypofunction, but none hypofunction in control group.
CONCLUSION
Motion sickness patients have high vestibular susceptible, some with vestibular hyperfunction. In posturography, a large number of motion sickness patients are central type but no vestibular hypofunction, but it is hard to keep balance when stimulating vestibulum.
Adult
;
Caloric Tests
;
Case-Control Studies
;
Female
;
Humans
;
Male
;
Motion Sickness
;
diagnosis
;
physiopathology
;
Vestibular Diseases
;
diagnosis
;
physiopathology
;
Young Adult