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Total sleep deprivation can increase vestibulo-ocular responses.

The effect of sleep deprivation on the vestibular function is largely unknown. Some studies have found that postural balance or vestibular reflexes are decreased in sleep-deprived subjects while others found no change. The aim of this study was to evaluate the effect of sleep deprivation on the vestibulo-ocular reflex (VOR). Horizontal eye movements were recorded in healthy subjects during earth vertical axis rotation in darkness once after an ordinary night sleep and once after 26-29 h of sleep deprivation. In the first experiment (n = 8), for which rotation was a 60 degrees s(-1) velocity step, sleep deprivation induced a significant increase in VOR gain. In the second experiment (n = 12), for which rotation was sinusoidal (0.2 Hz +/- 25 degrees s(-1)), sleep deprivation induced no significant modification in VOR gain. The difference between the two studies was the abrupt onset of the step stimulation in comparison with the sinusoidal rotation. Because of its unexpected onset and the potential threat to postural balance, the step stimulation may activate the system specialized in reorienting attention towards salient or behaviourally relevant events. This system includes the right temporoparietal cortex, an area also involved in VOR control. A number of studies have found that sleep deprivation alters the activity of this cortical area during attentional tasks. It is therefore our hypothesis that the difference between the effects of these two vestibular stimulations results from a sleep deprivation-induced modulation of the right temporoparietal cortex.

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