Download presentation
1
The Dizzy Patient 4x4 Method
Dr Ahmad Alamadi FRCS Consultant, HOD Al Baraha Hospital
2
Vestibular Physiology
Orientation of our body in space is the primary function of the vestibular system. This is achieved by integration of signals from vestibular, visual and proprioceptive receptors at the level of brain stem. Information regarding the movement of the head relative to the body is largely provided by paired vestibular sensory endorgans
3
Vestibular Sensory Endorgans
4
Cristae & Otolithic organ
5
Information Relay Vestibulo-Ocular reflex (VOR)
Peripheral Vestibular System EYES Proprioceptive Receptors Central Vestibular Nuclei Vestibulocerebellar tracts (VCT) Vestibulospinal (VST) Vestibulo-Ocular reflex (VOR)
6
VOR Keeps a stable retinal image during head movement
As the head moves in one direction there should be an equal and opposite conjugate movement of the eyes (sometime known as the doll’s eye maneuver)
7
VOR Defect Bilateral Defect : (for example from systemic aminoglycoside toxicity) the patient will complain of imbalance and a blurring of vision with head movement better known as oscillopsia Unilateral defect : the equilibrium of the push-pull forces between the inner ears is altered. This result in a drift of the eyes away from side of lesion followed by a quick central nervous system (CNS) mediated saccade in a repetitive to and fro fashion better known as nystagmus. Nystagmus is the cardinal sign of a central or peripheral vestibular disorder
8
History Steps Organic Vs Psychogenic Vestibular Vs Non vestibular
Peripheral Vs Central Which Peripheral Vestibular Disorder
9
Organic Vs Psychogenic
Features Organic vestibular Psychogenic Duration Usually well defined i.e. seconds, minutes or hours (never a “flash”) Variable from a “flash” to days Not well defined Frequency Except for benign paroxysmal positional vertigo (BPPV), rarely more than once a day Constant or many times a day Head Movement Intensifies symptoms Symptoms usually unaffected Ataxia during spell Usually prominent Insignificant Effect of Hyperventilation Not like the attack Often reproduces symptoms accurately
10
Vestibular Vs Non vestibular
True Vertigo (hallucination of movement relative to self) Vs Non specific Dizziness Note patient with non specific dizziness need to be investigated for cardiac and neurological causes. Patients with true vertigo have a vestibular disease which can be central or peripheral
11
Peripheral Vs Central Ask for associated symptoms i.e. discharge, tinnitus, aural fullness and hearing loss Ask for focal neurological complaints i.e. diplopia, dysphagia, dysarthria, paresis, parasthesia or incontinence and LOC. Inner ear disorders should never be associated with a loss of consciousness
12
Which Peripheral Vestibular Disorder
Benign paroxysmal positional vertigo (BPPV) seconds; several attacks /day; positional Meniere's disease minutes to hours; tinnitus; fluctuating hearing loss; aural fullness Recurrent Vestibulopathy minutes to hours Vestibular Neuronitis (acute viral labyrinthitis) Hours to days
13
Examination Steps Otological examination Neurological examination
Special clinical vestibular tests Important Diagnostic Tests
14
Otological examination
Otoscopy Hearing assessment (Weber and Rinne tests) Fistula Test
15
Neurological examination
Cranial Nerves Cerebellar Tests Oculomotor Tests Smooth pursuit, saccades, visual fixation and vergence Balance Tests proprioception, Romberg’s and tandem gait tests (both eyes open and closed). When Smooth Pursuit is Normal it would be unlikely for a central disorder to be present
16
Special clinical vestibular tests
The Halmagyi maneuver The head shake test The oscillopsia test VOR suppression test
17
Important Diagnostic Tests
Dix-Hallpike Positional Test Hyperventilation Test
18
Conclusion 4 steps in History x = 99% Diagnosis 4 steps in Examination
19
Soon on DVD and Internet Interactive Multimedia Textbook of Otology www.otologytextbook.com
Thank You
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.