Transcript Vertigo
Vertigo
Dr. Abdulrahman Alsanosi
Associate professor
Otolaryngology consultant
Otologist , Neurotologist &Skull Base Surgeon
Head of Otology / Neurotology Unit
Director of cochlear implant program
King Abdulaziz University Hospital
From:
Antonieta Adiova <[email protected]>
Subject:
monday - at 1-2pm
Date:
February 14, 2012 2:49:51 PM GMT+03:00
To:
Abdulrahman Alsanosi <[email protected]>, [email protected]
Cc:
Babylyn Erolin Palmero <[email protected]>, [email protected], Dr. Saleh
Aldhahri [email protected]
dear dr. sanosi,
just to informed you pls that your lecture will be at 1 pm until 2 pm ...this coming monday
pls....for they have Ophtha activities.
thank you and Lyn will be with u coz im leaving tomorrow..
best regards
and NOT in the morning
INTRODUCTION
• Dizziness is a common symptom that accounted for
more than 5.6 million clinic visits in the United States
• 15% to 30% of patients, most often women and the
elderly, will experience dizziness severe enough to seek
medical attention at some time in their live
What are the components of
balance system ?
Inner ear (3 semicicular canals and
otolith organ )
Cerebellum
Vision (VOR)
Proprioceptive
How does balance
system work ?
Physiology
Function of vestibular system:
Transform of the forces associate with head
acceleration and gravity into a biological signals that
the brain can use to develop subjective awareness of
head position in space (orientation)
produce motor reflexes that will maintain posture and
ocular stability
It is not surprisingly that vestibular
lesion cause:
Imbalance
posture and gait imbalance
visual distortion (oscillopsia ).
What is vertigo?
VERTIGO
The word "vertigo" comes from the
Latin "vertere", to turn + the suffix
"-igo", a condition = a condition of
turning about).
It is an allusion of being moving or
the world is moving too.
What are the questions to ask in
history ?
Onset
Frequency
Duration
Associated auditory symptoms
Aggrevating and relieving factors
Ear disease or ear surgery
Trauma
Migraine
Ototoxic drug intake
Differential diagnosis
A) peripheral vestibular loss
B) central vestibular loss
What are the causes of
peripheral vestibular loss ?
peripheral vestibular loss
Vestibular neuritis
Benign paroxysmal positional vertigo ( BPPV)
Meneires disease (Endolymphatic hydrop )
Vestibular neuritis
Viral infection of vestibular organ
Affect all ages but rare in childern
Affected patient presents acutely with
nystagmous ,vertigo and nausea &vomiting
spontaneous
Patient requires only symptomatic treatment
It takes 3 weeks to recover from vestibular neuritis
Vestibualr neuritis
BPPV( benign paroxysmal
positional vertigo )
BPPV
The most common cause of vertigo in
patient > 40 years
Repeated attacks of vertigo usually of
short duration less than a minute .
Provoked by certain positions (rolling
in beds, looking up ,and head rotations)
Not associated
impairment
with
any
hearing
BPPV
Diagnosis
History
Dix-Halpike maneuver
Endolymphatic hydrop
(Meneire’s disease)
Pathophysiology :
Unknown etiology
↑ ↓production of fluid within
inner compartment
vertigo (minutes to hours )
Low frequency fluctuating SNHL
Tinnitus and fullness in the ear.
In 10 - 20% of cases the disease
later involves the opposite ear
Meneire’s disease
Diagnosis
-History
-PTA
Meneire’s disease
Management
-low-salt diet
-Medical therapy
- Meniett device's
-Chemical perfusion
-Surgery
SUMMARY
Diagnosis
Duration of
attack
hearing
Course of
diseases
Treatment
Vestibular N
Days
normal
Self limited
Symptomatic
BPPV
Seconds
normal
Recurrent
Exercise
Meneire’s
diseaseM
Minutes to hours
Affected
Recurrent
Medical
&surgical
40
34
30
20
10
0
17
12
1
1 5
16
MEN
14
5
10
WOMEN
8
1
< 20 21-30
31-40 41-50
51-60 61-70
0
0
MEN
>70
What are the causes of
central ?
CVA (Cerebero vascular accident)
Brain tumor ( acoustic neuroma )
Multiple sclerosis
CVA
Elderly patient with chronic
disease like (DM ,HTN) with
sudden
attack
of
vertigo
+neurological symptoms
Acoustic tumor
Benign tumor
Arise from vestibular devision of
VIII
Clinical presenatation:
Unilateral tinnitus
Hearing loss
Dizziness
Acoustic neuroma
Diagnosis :
History
PTA
( Unilateral SNHL )
Radiology
diagnosis
History is the most important
key to diagnosis for a
dizzy patient .
Investiagtions
PTA
Vestibular testing
CT SCAN
MRI
A dizzy patient may fit into one
of the following scenarios
Scenario # 1
The patient who is having a first
ever attack of acute spontaneous
vertigo.
Acute vestibular neuritis
cerebellar infarction.
How to differentiate ?
-
Clinically
(
General
appearance
/nystagmus/head impulse test)
- Radiology
of
patient
Scenario #2
The patient who has repeated attacks of
vertigo, but is seen while well
A- Recurrent spontaneous vertigo
Menière’s disease
Migraine induced vertigo
perilymph fistula
B- Recurrent Positioning Vertigo
BPPV
Scenario #3
The patient who is off
balance
Bilateral vestibulopathy
posterior fossa tumour
Take away message
Thank you