Dizziness - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Dizziness

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Migraine. Vertigo occurs in approximately 25% of migraine patients ... Headaches that meet International Headache Society criteria for migraine. Treat migraine ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Dizziness


1
Dizziness
  • Pete Kang
  • NYU School of Medicine
  • Class of 2001

2
Dizziness epidemiology
  • 1.5 of all hospital admissions
  • 26 of all ED pts stated that they had
    experienced dizziness
  • Most common non-pain-related complaint in the ED
  • Account for 8 million outpatient visits per year
    in the U.S.
  • Adult gt Pediatric

3
Dizziness differential diagnosisbroad
categories of diseases
  • Vertigo
  • Near-faint or Presyncope dizziness
  • Psychophysiologic dizziness
  • Hypoglycemic dizziness
  • Disequilibrium
  • Drug-induced dizziness

4
Vertigo subclasses
  • Acute spontaneous attack
  • Recurrent spontaneous attacks
  • Recurrent episodes of positional vertigo

5
Acute spontaneous attack of vertigo
  • Unilateral loss of vestibular function
  • Clinical presentation
  • Intense sense of rotation aggravated by head
    motion
  • World turns slowly toward intact side, then
    quickly toward affected side
  • Prefers to sit upright w/ head still or to lie w/
    intact side undermost
  • Difficulty in standing/walking may fall toward
    affected side
  • May have nausea/vomiting, malaise, pallor,
    diarrhea

6
Peripheral vs. Central lesions
  • Peripheral
  • Severe nausea/vomiting
  • Mild imbalance
  • Hearing loss common
  • Mild oscillopsia
  • No focal signs
  • Rapid compensation
  • Central
  • Mod. nausea/vomiting
  • Severe imbalance
  • Hearing loss rare
  • Severe oscillopsia
  • Focal signs
  • Slow compensation

7
Viral neurolabyrinthitis
  • Most common gt90 of cases in younger age group
    w/o major vascular risk factors
  • Subacute onset URI 2 weeks prior
  • Unilateral caloric paresis, /- hearing loss
  • No other focal signs
  • Symptomatic management, vestibular rehabilitation

8
Bacterial otomastoiditis w/ labyrinth involvement
  • Prior infection bony erosion seen in CT
  • Possible cholesteatoma
  • Possible complication of bacterial meningitis
  • Antibiotics
  • Surgical debridement

9
Cerebellar infarct/hemorrhage
  • Elderly, w/ vascular risk factors
  • Other focal neurological signs present usually

10
Multiple sclerosis
  • Vertigo is the presenting symptom in 5 of
    patients w/ MS
  • Multifocal neurologic symptoms/signs
  • Characteristic T2-intense lesions in white matter
    on MRI

11
Recurrent, spontaneous attacks of vertigo
  • Sudden, temporary, and large reversible
    impairment of resting neural activity in one
    labyrinth or its central connections
  • Lasts from minutes to hours
  • Restoration of normal neural activity, rather
    than compensation

12
Menieres disease
  • Characteristic fluctuating low-frequency hearing
    loss
  • Episodic vertigo
  • Roaring tinnitus
  • Ear pressure

13
Autoimmune inner ear disease
  • May mimic Menieres disease
  • Signs/symptoms of systemic involvement
  • Elevated ESR, positive ANAs/rheumatoid factor
  • Immunosuppression

14
Syphilitic labyrinthitis
  • Similar to Menieres disease in signs/symptoms
  • Positive VDRL and/or FTA-ABS
  • Penicillin, steroids

15
Migraine
  • Vertigo occurs in approximately 25 of migraine
    patients
  • Hearing loss infrequent
  • Headaches that meet International Headache
    Society criteria for migraine
  • Treat migraine

16
Vertebrobasilar TIA
  • Common cause in older patients w/ risk factors
  • Subclavian steal syndrome
  • Abrupt, last several minutes
  • Other sxs of posterior circulation
  • Antiplatelet drugs, anticoagulation

17
Recurrent, positional vertigo
  • Transient excitation within the vestibular
    pathways triggered by change in position
  • Central vs. Peripheral lesions

18
Recurrent, positional vertigo peripheral vs.
central
  • Peripheral
  • Torsional/horizontal
  • Latency
  • Brief
  • Fatigability
  • Debris moving in semicircular canal
  • Central
  • Pure vertical
  • No latency
  • Persistent
  • No fatigability
  • Damage to central vestibulo-ocular pathways
  • Brainstem or cerebellum

19
Benign positional vertigo (BPV)
  • Dix-Hallpike test
  • 2-10 sec latency
  • Torsional/horizontal nystagmus
  • Lasts lt 30 sec (fatigability)
  • Any deviation from this must raise suspicion for
    a central lesion

20
Recurrent, positional vertigo central lesions
  • Multiple sclerosis
  • Cerebellar tumors
  • Medulloblastomas
  • Cerebellar atrophy
  • Chiari type I malformation

21
Near-faint dizziness or presyncope
  • Light-headedness before losing consciousness or
    fainting
  • Reduced blood flow to the entire brain
  • Causes
  • Vasovagal
  • Orthostatic hypotension
  • Volume depletion
  • Cardiac arrhythmias, cardiomyopathy, constrictive
    pericarditis, aortic stenosis

22
Psychophysiologic dizziness
  • Associated with panic disorder (lifetime
    prevalence of 1.6)
  • Hyperventilation ? reduce pCO2 ? cerebral
    vasoconstriction ? decreased cerebral blood flow
  • Onset with specific situations (such as public
    places, driving in highways, etc.)

23
Hypoglycemic dizziness
  • Complication of insulin/sulfonylurea treatment
  • Insulinoma
  • Fasting
  • Postprandial phenomenon (functional hypoglycemia)

24
Disequilibrium
  • Sensation of losing ones balance without feeling
    of illusionary movement or impending LOC
  • Unsteadiness standing, walking
  • Disruption in integration between sensory inputs
    and motor outputs
  • Associated with aging

25
Drug-induced dizziness
  • Aminoglycosides, cisplatin
  • Vertigo, disequilibrium
  • Damage to vestibular hair cells
  • Antiepileptic
  • Carbamazepine, pheytoin, primidone
  • Disequilibrium, intoxication
  • Tranquilizers
  • Barbiturates, benzodiazepines, tricyclics
  • Intoxication

26
Drug-induced dizziness
  • Antihypertensives/diuretics
  • presyncope
  • Alcohol
  • Intoxication ? CNS depression
  • Disequilibrium ? cerebellar toxicity
  • Positional vertigo ? change in cupula specific
    gravity

27
Treatment medical
  • Best therapy treating the underlying disease
  • Indication for symptomatic therapy
  • Illness is not readily treatable
  • Treatment must be continued for a long period
    before improvement
  • Severe and prolonged vertigo

28
Treatment medical
  • Acute severe vertigo
  • Promethazine (antihistamine) sedative (),
    antiemetic ()
  • Diazepam sedative (), antiemetic ()
  • Nausea vomiting
  • Prochlorperazine (phenothiazine)
  • Metoclopramide (benzamide)
  • Chronic recurrent vertigo
  • Meclizine (antihistamine)
  • Dimenhydrinate (antihistamine)

29
Treatment surgical
  • Conservative surgery
  • Shunt surgery (decompress endolymphatic sac)
  • Effective in 75 of cases
  • Selective section of vestibular division of CN
    VIII
  • Effective in gt90 of cases
  • lt10 significant hearing loss
  • Abnormal vascular loop at the brainstem insertion
    of CN VIII

30
Treatment surgical
  • Destructive surgery
  • Labyrinthectomy
  • Complete destruction of the end organ
  • Extremely high cure rate
  • Cost destruction of all hearing in the involved
    ear

31
Vestibular rehabilitation
  • Process of compensation
  • Requires
  • Intact vision depth perception
  • Normal proprioception
  • Intact sensation in lower limbs
  • Graded increase in demand for central
    compensation of vestibular input
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