Transcript for:
Understanding the Vestibular System

The vestibular system is responsible  for the body’s equilibrium, it maintains   balance and provides awareness of  the body’s spatial orientation.   Vestibular sensory organs detect changes  in the head’s positions and movements,   and transmit this information to various regions  of the brain. Projections to the brainstem trigger   reflex pathways that lead to compensatory actions  to maintain stability or re-establish equilibrium,   while projections to the cortex provide  perception of gravity and movement.  Examples of vestibular reflex pathways include:

  • the vestibulo-ocular reflex that controls eye   muscles to keep visual objects in focus while  the head is moving. It does so by moving the   eyes in the opposite direction as the head.
  • and the vestibulo-spinal reflex that senses   a potential loss of balance and activates  body muscles to keep the body from falling.  The sensory part of the vestibular system is  located in the inner ear on each side of the body.   It consists of 3 semicircular canals  that sense rotational movements,   such as when the head is turning, and 2  otolithic organs that sense head positions,   as well as straight line motions, such  as when riding in a car or an elevator.  The 3 semicircular canals, or ducts, are oriented  approximately at a right angle to each other,   each corresponding roughly to one of the 3  planes of motions: turning left and right,   nodding up and down, and tilting to a side.  They contain a fluid called endolymph.   Each canal has an enlargement at one end called an  ampulla. Within the ampulla, there are hair cells   embedded in a gel-like structure named cupula  that extends the entire height of the ampulla.  When the head turns, the ducts that are located  on the same plane of motion rotate, but the fluid   lags behind because of inertia. This causes the  fluid to briefly move in the opposite direction as   the head, and either push or pull on the cupula,  bending the cilia on the hair cells, and thus   activating them to send nerve impulses to the  brain. The direction of the bend determines if the   signals generated are excitatory or inhibitory.  Because the 2 sides of the head are mirror images,   a head turn generates excitatory signals on  one side, and inhibitory signals on the other.  The 2 otolithic organs are 2 patches of hair  cells oriented nearly perpendicular to each other:   the saccule being vertical, and the utricle  being horizontal. The cilia of these cells   are embedded in a gel-like layer sprinkled with  calcium carbonate crystals called otoconia,   commonly known as “ear rocks”. The crystals add  weight to the layer, pulling it down with gravity.  When the head is in upright position,  the gelatinous layer bears down   evenly on the cells of the utricle, the cilia  remain straight and no signals are generated.   On the vertical saccule, however, the heavy  gel is pulled down by gravity at one end,   bending the cilia, generating nerve impulses.  The reverse is true when the head is horizontal.   Other head positions are determined by a  combination of signals coming from both organs.  Vestibular sensory organs detect not the motion  itself, but changes in the rate of motion,   specifically acceleration or deceleration. For  example, when a person is sitting in a car that   starts to move, the heavy gel-like layer of the  utricle lags behind at first, bending the cilia   back, activating the hair cells. The more sudden  the car starts, the greater the stimulation.   Once the car is in stable motion, the gel  catches up with the rest of the tissue,   and no activation results. Similar events occur  in the saccule during an elevator ride up or down.