Is activation of the vestibular system by electromagnetic induction a possibility in an MRI context?

Author:

Bouisset Nicolas12ORCID,Nissi Janita3,Laakso Ilkka3,Reynolds Raymond F.4,Legros Alexandre12567ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Human Threshold Research Group, Lawson Health Research Institute London Ontario Canada

2. School of Kinesiology Western University London Ontario Canada

3. Department of Electrical Engineering and Automation Aalto University Espoo Finland

4. School of Sport, Exercise & Rehabilitation Sciences University of Birmingham Birmingham UK

5. EuroMov Digital Health in Motion, Univ Montpellier IMT Mines Ales Montpellier France

6. Departments of Medical Biophysics and Medical Imaging Western University London Ontario Canada

7. Eurostim Montpellier France

Abstract

AbstractIn recent years, an increasing number of studies have discussed the mechanisms of vestibular activation in strong magnetic field settings such as occur in a magnetic resonance imaging scanner environment. Amid the different hypotheses, the Lorentz force explanation currently stands out as the most plausible mechanism, as evidenced by activation of the vestibulo‐ocular reflex. Other hypotheses have largely been discarded. Nonetheless, both human data and computational modeling suggest that electromagnetic induction could be a valid mechanism which may coexist alongside the Lorentz force. To further investigate the induction hypothesis, we provide, herein, a first of its kind dosimetric analysis to estimate the induced electric fields at the vestibular system and compare them with what galvanic vestibular stimulation would generate. We found that electric fields strengths from induction match galvanic vestibular stimulation strengths generating vestibular responses. This review examines the evidence in support of electromagnetic induction of vestibular responses, and whether movement‐induced time‐varying magnetic fields should be further considered and investigated.

Publisher

Wiley

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