Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/11434/764
Title: Microvascular vestibular nerve palsy may be a cause of acute vestibular syndrome in older patients.
Epworth Authors: Gerraty, Richard
Roberts, H. N.
Luthra, K.
McKenzie, Dean
Infeld, Bernard
Sultana, Ron
Keywords: Persistent Acute Vertigo
Horizontal Head Impulse Test
hHIT
Stroke
Video Head Impulse Testing
vHIT
Acute Vestibular Neuritis
ICS Impulse
Vestibulo-Ocular Reflex
VOR
Vestibular Neuritis
Diagnosis
Neurosciences Clinical Institute, Epworth HealthCare, Victoria, Australia
Issue Date: Jul-2016
Conference Name: Epworth Research Institute Research Week 2016.
Conference Location: Epworth HealthCare, Victoria, Australia.
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Patients with persistent acute vertigo and normal horizontal head impulse test (hHIT) are often referred for MRI looking for stroke or other central pathology. Recent literature does not support a peripheral pathology even if brain MRI is normal. Video head impulse testing (vHIT) may confirm a peripheral vestibulopathy. METHODS: Adult patients with suspected acute vestibular neuritis were examined with a structured physical examination and then the eye movement response to rapid head impulses using the ICS Impulse vHIT device on each day of their hospital admission. We compared data on those patients with normal range vestibule-ocular (VOR) gain ≥ 0.8 on the affected side with those having more sever VOR gain reductions < 0.8. RESULTS: Amongst 21 patients with acute vestibular syndrome there were 10 patients with acute vertigo, fixation-suppressible second degree spontaneous nystagmus, and either a subtle positive hHIT, equivocal or normal hHIT and a vHIT VOR gain of ≥ 0.8. Clear asymmetry of the VOR gain on vHIT testing was present in the minority. Catch-up saccades on the affected side were evident in all patients. These mild vestibulopathy patients were older, mean age 70, versus mean age 49 for the more severely affected patients with VOR gain < 0.08 (p=0.002). CONCLUSION: Mild vestibulopathies with subtle clinical signs may be more difficult to differentiate from vertebrobasilar stroke. We found that these are more likely to be seen in older patients. VHIT testing can confirm a peripheral pathology but this may not be vestibular neuritis. We propose that these may be microvascular vestibular nerve palsies.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/11434/764
Type: Conference Poster
Affiliated Organisations: Department of Medicine, Monash University.
Type of Clinical Study or Trial: Comparative Study
Appears in Collections:Neurosciences
Research Month

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