Book Chapter10.1016/B978-0-444-63437-5.00027-3
Chapter 27 – Motion sickness
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TL;DR: This chapter describes the signs and symptoms of motion sickness and different types of provocative stimuli, and the efficacy and relative advantages and disadvantages of various behavioral and pharmacologic countermeasures are evaluated.
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Abstract: Over 2000 years ago the Greek physician Hippocrates wrote, “sailing on the sea proves that motion disorders the body.” Indeed, the word “nausea” derives from the Greek root word naus, hence “nautical,” meaning a ship. The primary signs and symptoms of motion sickness are nausea and vomiting. Motion sickness can be provoked by a wide variety of transport environments, including land, sea, air, and space. The recent introduction of new visual technologies may expose more of the population to visually induced motion sickness. This chapter describes the signs and symptoms of motion sickness and different types of provocative stimuli. The “how” of motion sickness (i.e., the mechanism) is generally accepted to involve sensory conflict, for which the evidence is reviewed. New observations concern the identification of putative “sensory conflict” neurons and the underlying brain mechanisms. But what reason or purpose does motion sickness serve, if any? This is the “why” of motion sickness, which is analyzed from both evolutionary and nonfunctional maladaptive theoretic perspectives. Individual differences in susceptibility are great in the normal population and predictors are reviewed. Motion sickness susceptibility also varies dramatically between special groups of patients, including those with different types of vestibular disease and in migraineurs. Finally, the efficacy and relative advantages and disadvantages of various behavioral and pharmacologic countermeasures are evaluated.
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Citations
From car sickness to autonomous car sickness: A review
Julie Iskander,Mohammed Hassan Attia,Khaled Saleh,Darius Nahavandi,Ahmed Abobakr,Shady Mohamed,Houshyar Asadi,Abbas Khosravi,Chee Peng Lim,Mohammed Hossny +9 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present different theories explaining the "how" and "why" of motion sickness and then discuss whether these factors are applicable to autonomous car sickness, with a proposal of a framework that provides a viable solution to mitigate autonomous carsickness.
130
Mal de débarquement syndrome diagnostic criteria: Consensus document of the Classification Committee of the Bárány Society
Yoon Hee Cha,Robert W. Baloh,Catherine Cho,Måns Magnusson,Jae Jin Song,Michael Strupp,Floris L. Wuyts,Jeffrey P. Staab +7 more
TL;DR: Diagnostic criteria for mal de débarquement syndrome (MdDS) are presented and features that distinguish MdDS from vestibular migraine, motion sickness, and persistent postural perceptual dizziness (PPPD) are reviewed.
The Neurophysiology and Treatment of Motion Sickness
Andreas Koch,Ingolf Cascorbi,Martin Westhofen,Manuel Dafotakis,Sebastian Klapa,Johann P. Kuhtz-Buschbeck +5 more
TL;DR: The various types of motion sickness can be treated with general measures to lessen the intersensory conflict, behavioral changes, and drugs.
Motion sickness: an overview.
TL;DR: In most cases, motion sickness can be prevented by behavioral and environmental modifications (avoidance, habituation, and minimization of motion stimuli).
Motion sickness diagnostic criteria: Consensus document of the classification committee of the Bárány society
Yoon Hee Cha,John F. Golding,Behrang Keshavarz,Joseph M. Furman,Ji Soo Kim,Jose A. Lopez-Escamez,Jose A. Lopez-Escamez,Måns Magnusson,Bill J. Yates,Ben D. Lawson,Jeffrey P. Staab,Alexandre Bisdorff +11 more
TL;DR: The diagnostic criteria for motion sickness and VIMS include adverse reactions elicited during exposure to physical motion or visual motion leading to observable signs or symptoms of greater than minimal severity as discussed by the authors.
References
An ecological Theory of Motion Sickness and Postural Instability
TL;DR: The hypothesis is that animals become sick in situations in which they do not possess (or have not yet learned) strategies that are effective for the maintenance of postural stability.
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Motion sickness susceptibility questionnaire revised and its relationship to other forms of sickness.
TL;DR: It was concluded that the revised MSSQ can be used as a direct replacement of the original version and points to the involvement of the vestibular system in the response to nonmotion emetogenic stimuli.
520
Motion sickness: a synthesis and evaluation of the sensory conflict theory.
TL;DR: This paper reviews the types of stimuli that cause sickness and synthesizes a mathematical statement of the sensory conflict hypothesis based on observer theory from control engineering that describes the dynamic coupling between the putative conflict signals and nausea magnitude estimates.
463
Motion sickness: an evolutionary hypothesis
TL;DR: An hypothesis is proposed suggesting that motion sickness is triggered by difficulties which arise in the programming of movements of the eyes or head when the relations between the spatial frameworks defined by the visual, vestibular, or proprioceptive inputs are repeatedly and unpredictably perturbed.
401
Motion sickness susceptibility
TL;DR: The aim of this paper is to review some of the more important factors governing motion sickness susceptibility, with an emphasis on the personal rather than physical stimulus factors.
366