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Spatial Orientation, Navigation, and Neuropsychologic Function in Patients With Vestibular Implant

30 maggio 2026 aggiornato da: Richard Lewis, Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary

Vestibular Implant Tested in Patients With Peripheral Vestibular Damage: Effects on Spatial Orientation, Navigation, and Neuropsychologic Function

The vestibular system, located in the inner ear, provides information to the brain information about how head acceleration and orientation relative to gravity. Damage to the vestibular system is usually permanent and can contribute to a lower quality of life. The goal of this research is to to examine how vestibular implants (VI) may improve performance of cognitive tasks in patients with severe vestibular damage. These higher-level cognitive behaviors include (1) orientation relative to gravity, (2) navigation, and (3) neuropsychologic function. VI patients will be tested in these three cognitive domains across study sessions: pre-stimulation (VI implanted but stimulation OFF), following chronic stimulation (12 days, VI-ON), and then again 1 month later with the VI turned off. There will be both "true" stimulation experiments during which the VI will provide motion-modulated stimulation and also "placebo" stimulation (no motion cues, tonic stimulus). The order of these experiments will be randomized and separated by 3 months. Researchers will compare VI data in the three cognitive domains (spatial orientation, navigation, & neuropsychologic function) with control data from non-implanted bilateral vestibular loss (BVL) and unilateral vestibular loss (UVL) patients and normal subjects.

Panoramica dello studio

Descrizione dettagliata

This project will test the capability of a vestibular implant (VI) to improve cognitive dysfunction in patients with severe vestibular damage. At Mass Eye and Ear (MEE), we will test non-implant vestibular patients with differing degrees of vestibular damage. At the University of Geneva (UNIGE), they will recruit and implant patients with severe vestibular and auditory deficits with a combined cochlear and vestibular implant. These are the patients with VIs we intend to test in collaboration with the UNIGE team. Notably, all implant surgeries are done at UNIGE as part of their ongoing vestibular implant research. The team at MEE submitting this CT.gov study is not involved with any aspect of the recruitment, surgery, or post-operative care of the patients receiving implants at UNIGE. We will work with the team at UNIGE to study these patients after they have received the VI on the protocols described below before, during, and after they receive stimulation from the VI. Specifically, we will measure how higher-level behaviors, including spatial orientation, navigation, and neuropsychologic function, are affected by stimulation provided by the vestibular implant, and in parallel will study these behaviors in non-implanted patients with different degrees of vestibular impairment. Our goal is to determine if the cognitive dysfunction experienced by patients with severe vestibular damage can be improved with prosthetic stimulation, findings which would expand the clinical utility of the vestibular implant while concomitantly improving understanding of the role of vestibular information in cognition. Damage to the vestibular periphery is typically permanent and untreatable (aside from physical therapy), and when it is bilateral, can result in severe degradation of vestibular-dependent behaviors. The VI was developed as a vestibular analogue to the widely employed cochlear implant, senses the head's angular velocity in three-dimensions, and provides this information to the brain by stimulating semicircular canal afferents using implanted electrodes. While VI research has progressed from animal models to human patients with vestibular damage, it has focused almost exclusively on eye movements and to a lesser extent balance and gait (although recent human studies also queried subjective measures of dizziness and quality of life). Cognitive processes have been ignored in prior VI studies, even though cognitive symptoms (often referred to as "brain fog") can be prominent and disabling in vestibular-deficient patients. More generally, vestibular contributions to cognition remain controversial and poorly characterized. In this study, we will investigate the effects of VI stimulation on (1) spatial orientation, (2) navigation, and (3) neuropsychologic function by characterizing these behaviors in patients with bilateral vestibular loss (BVL) who have unilateral VIs, with and without chronic vestibular stimulation. To serve as benchmarks for the BVL patients with/without VI stimulation, and to define the effects of vestibular loss on cognitive behavior, we will also study non-implanted BVL and unilateral vestibular loss (UVL) patients and normal subjects. Subjective assessments of cognitive function, dizziness and perceived disability will be also be measured using patient reported outcome measures (PROMs) and we will also assess more general quality-of-life metrics. We predict that the VI will improve spatial orientation, navigation, and visuo-spatial neuropsychologic function in BVL patients and that these measures will display correlations with the PROMs that characterize symptom severity and quality-of-life metrics. In sum, the proposed work will be the first to examine the capability of chronic VI stimulation to improve the cognitive deficits caused by severe vestibular damage, and will also examine the association between the severity of vestibular damage and the degree of cognitive deficits, and the relationship between vestibular-mediated cognitive deficits and the metrics that quantify subjective disability. This work will advance scientific knowledge while promoting the development of the VI as a therapy that has the potential to improve the clinical status and quality-of-life for vestibular-deficient patients.

Tipo di studio

Interventistico

Iscrizione (Stimato)

20

Fase

  • Non applicabile

Contatti e Sedi

Questa sezione fornisce i recapiti di coloro che conducono lo studio e informazioni su dove viene condotto lo studio.

Contatto studio

Backup dei contatti dello studio

Luoghi di studio

      • Geneva, Svizzera, 1211 Geneva 4
        • Reclutamento
        • Universite de Geneve
        • Contatto:
        • Contatto:
        • Investigatore principale:
          • Angelica Perez-Fornos, PhD, DAS

Criteri di partecipazione

I ricercatori cercano persone che corrispondano a una certa descrizione, chiamata criteri di ammissibilità. Alcuni esempi di questi criteri sono le condizioni generali di salute di una persona o trattamenti precedenti.

Criteri di ammissibilità

Età idonea allo studio

  • Adulto
  • Adulto più anziano

Accetta volontari sani

No

Descrizione

  1. Patients receiving vestibular implants at UNIGE:

    Their inclusion criteria are defined as follows:

    • Deaf, scheduled for CI surgery
    • Minimum of five year history of documented absence of bilateral auditory and vestibular function, based on review of their audiograms and vestibular tests.
    • Vestibular testing consistent with BVL
    • No neurologic disease. note: these patients are recruited and implanted by the group at the University of Geneva Hospital (UNIGE) as part of their ongoing research. The study team are not involved in any way with the decision to surgically implant patients with cochlear or vestibular implants, nor are the researchers involved in any way with pre- or post-operative clinical care. The researchers only involvement is to perform the cognitive tests before, during, and after relatively short periods of stimulation using the vestibular implant (VI)
  2. Vestibular patients tested at MEE: vestibular testing consistent with unilateral or bilateral vestibular damage.

Both aspects of the study share the same exclusion criteria:

Exclusion Criteria:

  • No known neurologic or otologic disease other than the vestibular and auditory deficits noted above.
  • Pregnancy. Pregnant women and women up to 4 months postpartum will be excluded because of the known effects and unknown potential effects of pregnancy on sensory function.
  • Body weight >250 lbs (due to motion device safety limits)
  • The chronic use of vestibular suppressant medication (benzodiazepine, antihistamine, anticholinergic)
  • Inability to stand or walk unassisted.
  • Blindness.
  • Unstable medical condition.
  • Orthopedic or musculoskeletal injuries/conditions that affect gait or balance.
  • Ongoing neck or spinal pain/injuries or recent history of neck or spinal surgery
  • Amputation, musculoskeletal deformity, or significant leg-length discrepancy
  • A history of severe head trauma.
  • Any major psychiatric disorder (e.g., psychosis, schizophrenia, panic disorder), not including anxiety or depression.
  • Severe heart or pulmonary conditions
  • Active cancer for which chemo-/radiation therapy is being received.

Piano di studio

Questa sezione fornisce i dettagli del piano di studio, compreso il modo in cui lo studio è progettato e ciò che lo studio sta misurando.

Come è strutturato lo studio?

Dettagli di progettazione

  • Scopo principale: Scienza basilare
  • Assegnazione: Randomizzato
  • Modello interventistico: Assegnazione incrociata
  • Mascheramento: Separare

Armi e interventi

Gruppo di partecipanti / Arm
Intervento / Trattamento
Comparatore attivo: "true" stimulation
tonic + motion-modulated stimulation
Two types of stimulation are used, tonic + motion-modulated ("true") & tonic-only ("placebo") stimulation; order is randomized. The VI stimulation period prior to testing is 12 days. For the experiments, the VI is connected to the head-mounted prosthetic circuit and then stimulation is activated. The stimulation unit is the current-balanced biphasic pulse, and the pulse amplitude for each subject is determined through a tuning procedure. Experiments start with an adaptation to tonic baseline stimulation with the head stationary (~30 min). Motion-modulated stimulation employs 3 angular velocity sensors (one aligned with the sensitive axis of each canal), the transduced head velocity signal is high-pass filtered to simulate normal canal dynamics, and filtered head velocity is used to modulate the strength (magnitude, rate) of the electrical stimulation provided by the corresponding implanted electrode. Stimulation strength adjusts for head rotations that change canal afference.
Comparatore fittizio: "placebo" stimulation
tonic-only stimulation
Two types of stimulation are used, tonic + motion-modulated ("true") & tonic-only ("placebo") stimulation; order is randomized. The VI stimulation period prior to testing is 12 days. For the experiments, the VI is connected to the head-mounted prosthetic circuit and then stimulation is activated. The stimulation unit is the current-balanced biphasic pulse, and the pulse amplitude for each subject is determined through a tuning procedure. Experiments start with an adaptation to tonic baseline stimulation with the head stationary (~30 min). Motion-modulated stimulation employs 3 angular velocity sensors (one aligned with the sensitive axis of each canal), the transduced head velocity signal is high-pass filtered to simulate normal canal dynamics, and filtered head velocity is used to modulate the strength (magnitude, rate) of the electrical stimulation provided by the corresponding implanted electrode. Stimulation strength adjusts for head rotations that change canal afference.

Cosa sta misurando lo studio?

Misure di risultato primarie

Misura del risultato
Misura Descrizione
Lasso di tempo
Spatial Orientation: Changes in Subjective Postural Vertical
Lasso di tempo: pre-stim, chronic stim (1month + 12 days), and post-stim (1month)
Spatial orientation (subjective postural vertical) results are assessed for their accuracy and precision. Tests are repeated to look at changes for pre-stimulation (VI-OFF), following chronic stimulation (VI-ON), and post-stimulation (VI-OFF).
pre-stim, chronic stim (1month + 12 days), and post-stim (1month)
Spatial Orientation: Changes in Roll Tilt Perceptual Thresholds
Lasso di tempo: pre-stim, chronic stim (1month + 12 days), and post-stim (1month)
Spatial orientation (roll tilt perceptual thresholds) results are assessed for their accuracy and precision. Tests are repeated to look at changes for pre-stimulation (VI-OFF), following chronic stimulation (VI-ON), and post-stimulation (VI-OFF).
pre-stim, chronic stim (1month + 12 days), and post-stim (1month)
Changes in Navigation
Lasso di tempo: pre-stim, chronic stim (1month + 12 days), and post-stim (1month)
Navigation in a virtual reality visual environment is tested using a 'complete the triangle' task and results are assessed for their accuracy and precision. Tests are repeated to look at changes for pre-stimulation (VI-OFF), following chronic stimulation (VI-ON), and post-stimulation (VI-OFF).
pre-stim, chronic stim (1month + 12 days), and post-stim (1month)
Changes in Neuropsychologic Function
Lasso di tempo: pre-stim, chronic stim (1month + 12 days), and post-stim (1month)
Visuospatial and non-visuospatial neuropsychologic function are assessed using a standard battery of neuropsychologic tests. Tests are repeated to look at changes for pre-stimulation (VI-OFF), following chronic stimulation (VI-ON), and post-stimulation (VI-OFF).
pre-stim, chronic stim (1month + 12 days), and post-stim (1month)

Collaboratori e investigatori

Qui è dove troverai le persone e le organizzazioni coinvolte in questo studio.

Pubblicazioni e link utili

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Pubblicazioni generali

Studiare le date dei record

Queste date tengono traccia dell'avanzamento della registrazione dello studio e dell'invio dei risultati di sintesi a ClinicalTrials.gov. I record degli studi e i risultati riportati vengono esaminati dalla National Library of Medicine (NLM) per assicurarsi che soddisfino specifici standard di controllo della qualità prima di essere pubblicati sul sito Web pubblico.

Studia le date principali

Inizio studio (Effettivo)

22 gennaio 2026

Completamento primario (Stimato)

31 luglio 2029

Completamento dello studio (Stimato)

31 luglio 2029

Date di iscrizione allo studio

Primo inviato

30 maggio 2026

Primo inviato che soddisfa i criteri di controllo qualità

30 maggio 2026

Primo Inserito (Effettivo)

4 giugno 2026

Aggiornamenti dei record di studio

Ultimo aggiornamento pubblicato (Effettivo)

4 giugno 2026

Ultimo aggiornamento inviato che soddisfa i criteri QC

30 maggio 2026

Ultimo verificato

1 maggio 2026

Maggiori informazioni

Termini relativi a questo studio

Piano per i dati dei singoli partecipanti (IPD)

Hai intenzione di condividere i dati dei singoli partecipanti (IPD)?

INDECISO

Descrizione del piano IPD

Undecided at present

Informazioni su farmaci e dispositivi, documenti di studio

Studia un prodotto farmaceutico regolamentato dalla FDA degli Stati Uniti

No

Studia un dispositivo regolamentato dalla FDA degli Stati Uniti

No

Queste informazioni sono state recuperate direttamente dal sito web clinicaltrials.gov senza alcuna modifica. In caso di richieste di modifica, rimozione o aggiornamento dei dettagli dello studio, contattare register@clinicaltrials.gov. Non appena verrà implementata una modifica su clinicaltrials.gov, questa verrà aggiornata automaticamente anche sul nostro sito web .

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