Dizzinessandthe Otolaryngologypointof View: Sharmeen Sorathia, Yuri Agrawal,, Michael C. Schubert
Dizzinessandthe Otolaryngologypointof View: Sharmeen Sorathia, Yuri Agrawal,, Michael C. Schubert
Dizzinessandthe Otolaryngologypointof View: Sharmeen Sorathia, Yuri Agrawal,, Michael C. Schubert
Otolaryngology Point of
View
Sharmeen Sorathiaa,b, Yuri Agrawal, MD, MPH
c
,
Michael C. Schubert, PT PhDc,d,*
KEYWORDS
Dizziness Vertigo Evaluation Physical therapy History Examination
Vestibular tests
KEY POINTS
Dizziness can be classified as vertigo, lightheadedness, oscillopsia, or disequilibrium. It is
most commonly caused by peripheral vestibular disorders.
Vertigo is an illusion of motion often caused by asymmetric stimulation of the vestibular
pathway. It is most common in benign paroxysmal positional vertigo (BPPV), Meniere dis-
ease, and vestibular neuritis.
Evaluation of dizziness from the otolaryngology point of view includes essential compo-
nents in the history, examination, and vestibular function tests.
Vestibular rehabilitation plays an integral role in the management of vertigo. For BPPV, the
classic treatment is canalith repositioning maneuvers.
INTRODUCTION
Dizziness and Its Types
Dizziness is a broad term used to describe several sensations that are typically cate-
gorized as vertigo, disequilibrium, lightheadedness, or oscillopsia.
It is a commonly reported symptom presenting to specialists and emergency de-
partments affecting 15% to 20% of the general adult population.1,2 It is reported to
be more prevalent in women and the elderly.1
Common Causes
The nonspecific symptom of dizziness can have numerous causes ranging from life-
threatening to benign conditions. A critical review from 12 studies conducted on the
cause of dizziness classifies and reports the quality-adjusteda mean frequencies of
various causes, summarized in Table 1.3 The most common classifications are periph-
eral vestibular conditions followed by nonvestibular and nonpsychotic, psychiatric,
unknown, and central vestibular causes.
Vertigo is the sense of spinning or an illusion of a movement that is often described
as being objective (ie, the world is moving) or subjective (the person feels as if they are
moving). It is caused by an asymmetrical stimulation of the vestibular pathway and
thus can be due to intrinsic peripheral or central vestibular diseases or external con-
tributors that affect the pathway (ie, neurologic disease, medication). Common
Table 1
Causes of dizziness
The percentages add up to more than 100% due to dizziness being attributed to more than one
cause in some patients.
Data from Kroenke K, Hoffman RM, Einstadter D. How common are various causes of dizziness?
A Critical Review. South Med J 2000;93(2):162; with permission.
a
Quality adjusted: square root of the study’s quality score to enable weighting of the means of each
study.
Dizziness and the Otolaryngology Point of View 3
BPPV or vestibular neuritis is not associated with hearing loss. Although headaches
may or may not be prominent in vestibular migraine, motion sensitivity, photophobia,
phonophobia, aura, and nausea are common.
Ocular examination
For a thorough physical examination, it is important to begin with an ocular examina-
tion including pupillary reactivity and oculomotor movements. The examiner should
check smooth pursuit, saccades, and the ability to keep the eyes stable in different
positions of gaze. Subtle oculomotor abnormalities can sometimes be the only sign
behind a cerebellar dysfunction. A fundoscopic examination can also be helpful to
identify oculomotor abnormalities such as ocular torsion. Moreover, in cases of
increased intracranial pressure, visual acuity can be normal, and only papilledema
may present on fundoscopy. A cover test is also essential to perform to identify any
misalignments in the visual axis; of particular concern is any vertical deviation. Vertical
skew deviation in the absence of an extraocular muscle abnormality is the vertical
misalignment of the eyes that can occur in both acute peripheral lesions and more
sinister central disorders, more commonly in the latter. This test is helpful to distin-
guish between the peripheral or central disorders given peripheral typically causes
recover within a week.13
Ear examination
It is further essential to perform an ear examination. The use of an otoscope can reveal
impacted cerumen or any foreign object in the ear canal, removal of which might
relieve vertiginous symptoms.8 Fluid behind the eardrum, perforation, prominent scar-
ring, and other signs of middle ear disease should also be ruled out. A bedside hearing
examination can also be performed if the patient complains of hearing impairment,
including the Weber and Rinne tests to distinguish between conductive or sensori-
neural hearing loss.
Dizziness and the Otolaryngology Point of View 5
Nystagmus
Nystagmus is an involuntary rhythmic oscillatory movement of the eyes. It is essential
to examine any nystagmus present in a vertiginous patient. The jerk nystagmus typical
of inner ear pathologic condition includes a slow and fast component with the latter
used to name the direction of the nystagmus (ie, fast phase to the right is termed right
beating nystagmus). It is optimal to use Frenzel glasses that prevent fixation when
examining spontaneous nystagmus.
Spontaneous nystagmus is defined as nystagmus present at rest with the eyes in
primary position; the head should not be allowed to move. Spontaneous nystagmus
can appear in a patient with acute vertigo. In an acute peripheral vestibular loss (eg,
vestibular neuritis), spontaneous nystagmus is typically unidirectional and moving in
a horizontal and torsional manner, “beating” away from the pathologic ear. When ga-
zing in the direction of the fast phase, the velocity of the nystagmus will increase. The
velocity of nystagmus will also reduce with visual fixation. The inability to suppress the
nystagmus suggests a central cause.
Nystagmus from a central pathologic condition typically is direction changing
depending on gaze position, vertical (upbeat or downbeat), or even purely torsional.
However, some central causes for nystagmus can also have features similar to pe-
ripheral causes. Gaze-evoked nystagmus occurs with changes in gaze. Caution is
warranted if a symmetric horizontal nystagmus occurs with a few beats present in
each direction of gaze because this is normal and is called physiologic “endpoint”
nystagmus. Asymmetric, prolonged, or more pronounced nystagmus on changing
gaze indicates a pathologic condition. Horizontal gaze-evoked nystagmus can occur
from use of anticonvulsants, alcohol intoxication, or brainstem or cerebellar
disorders.14
Headshake nystagmus (HSN) identifies asymmetrical involvement from the vestib-
ular pathways. The examiner shakes the patient’s head back and forth vigorously,
20 cycles at the rate of 2 per second (2 Hz). At the end of the head shaking, the
eyes are examined for nystagmus with the direction of the fast phase beating toward
the healthy ear. This test is best done using Frenzel lenses in order to block visual fix-
ation. Not all patients with unilateral vestibular loss will have a positive HSN test. HSN
can also occur in cerebellar dysfunction.15,16 Those patients with symmetric vestibular
involvement will have a negative HSN test.
Positional nystagmus should be checked in every patient that reports dizziness,
to rule out BPPV. Nystagmus should be checked in both the Dix-Hallpike maneuver
and the roll test, described in detail in later discussion. It is important to first
identify any spontaneous nystagmus before proceeding with positional testing in
order to avoid the enhanced spontaneous nystagmus that often occurs when
placed in different head positions. Enhanced spontaneous nystagmus can cause
clinicians to mistakenly diagnose BPPV.
Dix-Hallpike test
This maneuver is the gold-standard test for diagnosing the most common location for
BPPV (the posterior canal) and confirms the displacement of otoconia (calcium car-
bonate crystals) into the semicircular canals (SCC). It is a quick and easy bedside
test that positions the head in a manner for gravity to cause displaced otoconia to
move and reproduce the patient symptoms while the examiner looks for nystagmus.
The direction of nystagmus along with the vertigo symptom (and sometimes nausea)
indicates which SCC is involved (Table 2).
To check for posterior canal BPPV, the most common location, the patient sits up-
right on a flat examination table wearing Frenzel glasses. Throughout the test, the
6 Sorathia et al
Table 2
Types of nystagmus with each affected semicircular canals
patient has to keep their eyes open. The examiner moves the patient’s head 45 to one
side and brings the patient to the supine position with head hyperextended 30 below
the horizon (head can be held hanging over the edge of the table). The typical BPPV
nystagmus begins after a latent period of a few seconds and then reduces within
1 minute. The test should be performed for each side. Alternatively, examiners can
perform this test with the head rotated 45 , but the patient lies on their side with no
hyperextension of the neck.17 It is the side of the head facing the ground that is
being tested each time.
Roll test
A supine roll test should be performed to evaluate horizontal SCC BPPV. The patient is
initially supine with head elevated w30 . Next, the head is rotated 90 to one side while
nystagmus and vertigo are assessed. Once the direction of the nystagmus is deter-
mined, the head is then returned to the neutral supine position. After any further eli-
cited nystagmus has subsided, the head is then turned 90 to the opposite side,
and the eyes are once again observed for nystagmus. In horizontal SCC BPPV, the
nystagmus may be described as either geotropic or apogeotropic when in the roll
test. Geotropic is horizontal nystagmus beating toward the undermost ear (toward
the earth). Ageotropic is horizontal nystagmus beating toward the uppermost ear
(away from the earth).
Romberg test
In the Romberg test, the patient is made to stand on a firm surface with feet
together and arms folded against the chest. This test is performed first with the
eyes open and then closed. Inability to maintain a straight posture or occurrence
of sway with both eyes open and closed suggests a pathologic condition, although
this test cannot locate where. Abnormal test results may be due to peripheral neu-
ropathy, cerebellar pathologic condition, or vestibular hypofunction among other
causes. If the sway is present only with the eyes closed, then the patient may
have difficulty using vestibular information. Next, the test is repeated while the pa-
tient stands on a 20-cm-thick foam cushion, which alters the proprioceptive input.
In bilateral vestibular loss, there is commonly an inability to maintain an upright po-
sition standing on foam with eyes closed. The Romberg test is not diagnostic for
vestibular hypofunction.
Caloric testing
The caloric test is one component of the ENG/VNG and considered the gold-standard
measure of unilateral vestibular hypofunction (UVH). It is the only test that measures
each labyrinth separately. Cold and warm water or air is flushed into the external audi-
tory canal leading to creation of a temperature gradient. This gradient causes endo-
lymphatic flow in the horizontal SCC. In addition, the eighth cranial nerve is directly
stimulated due to the gradient-induced flow, causing nystagmus (and sometimes
nausea). The slow components of the induced nystagmus from each stimulation are
compared to identify the side of lesion.
There has been moderate to strong evidence that vestibular rehabilitation is an effec-
tive and safe modality in UVH and BPPV.25–27 It has been recorded that patients after
resection of an acoustic neuroma recover balance earlier than if not treated.28 Like-
wise, patients suffering from acute unilateral vestibular neuritis have shown normaliza-
tion of postural sway within a significantly shorter time course than those without
treatment.29 Physical therapy has also improved symptoms in patients with vestibular
migraine.30,31 The goal is for patients to develop a home exercise program addressing
their limitations while safely improving function and symptoms.
on the extent of hypofunction. Patients benefit most when reinforced about compli-
ance with the exercises.
VESTIBULAR MIGRAINE
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