Abstract: | A unilateral labyrinthectomy was performed on anesthetized adult albino rats. Brain [14C]2-deoxyglucose (2DG) uptake was measured autoradiographically 3.5 h to 20 days later and compared to sham-operated controls. In the vestibular nuclei (nn.) of labyrinthectomized subjects, large left-right differences of 2DG uptake occurred, which decreased over time. The equalization of vestibular nuclear 2DG uptake paralleled behavioral compensation of body, neck and head postural abnormalities, and known equalization of vestibular nuclear cell firing rates during compensation. There was a small difference of 2DG uptake in medial and lateral vestibular nn. 20 days after lesions when animals had a residual head tilt and tonic eye deviation. In the oculomotor nn., trochlear nn. and interstitial n. of Cajal, large left-right differences of 2DG uptake occurred, which did not change over time. The higher 2DG uptake in these nn. occurred ipsilateral to the labyrinthine lesion and did not correlate with the onset and cessation of nystagmus. The persistent asymmetry did appear to correlate with ipsilateral downward and contralateral upward eye deviation which continued for long periods after the lesion. We hypothesize that the non-compensating metabolic asymmetry in the oculomotor and trochlear nn. could be due to lesioned otolithic input to the vestibular nn. which relays to trochlear and oculomotor nn. |