Diagnostic Tests for Vertigo, benign paroxysmal, in childhood
Vertigo, benign paroxysmal, in childhood Tests: Book Excerpts
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Vertigo, benign paroxysmal, in childhood Diagnosis: Book Excerpts
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Vertigo:
History and physical examination
(Handbook of Signs & Symptoms (Third Edition))
Ask your patient to describe the onset and duration of his vertigo, being careful to distinguish this symptom from dizziness. Does he feel that he’s moving or that his surroundings are moving around him? How often do the attacks occur? Do they follow position changes, or are they unpredictable? Find out if the patient can walk during an attack, if he leans to one side, and if he’s ever fallen. Ask if he experiences motion sickness and if he prefers one position during an attack. Obtain a recent drug history, and note any evidence of alcohol abuse.
Perform a neurologic assessment, focusing particularly on eighth cranial nerve function. Observe the patient’s gait and posture for abnormalities.
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Source: Handbook of Signs & Symptoms (Third Edition), 2006
Vertigo:
History and physical examination
(Professional Guide to Signs & Symptoms (Fifth Edition))
Ask your patient to describe the onset and duration of his vertigo, being careful to distinguish this symptom from dizziness. Does he feel that he’s moving or that his surroundings are moving around him? How often do the attacks occur? Do they follow position changes, or are they unpredictable? Find out if the patient can walk during an attack, if he leans to one side, and if he’s ever fallen. Ask if he experiences motion sickness and if he prefers one position during an attack. Obtain a recent drug history, and note any evidence of alcohol abuse.
Perform a neurologic assessment, focusing particularly on eighth cranial nerve function. Observe the patient’s gait and posture for abnormalities.
» READ BOOK EXCERPT ONLINE »
Source: Professional Guide to Signs & Symptoms (Fifth Edition), 2006
Vertigo:
Physical examination (PE)
(The 10-Minute Diagnosis Manual: Symptoms and Signs in the Time-Limited Encounter)
This will emphasize orthostatic vital signs, the eyes, ears, and neurologic and cardiovascular systems.
A. Detection of nystagmus is critical because it is the only objective sign of vertigo (5). Nystagmus can occur spontaneously or in response to changes in eye or body position. Peripheral vestibular disorders usually cause horizontal or rotatory nystagmus, whereas CNS pathology is reflected by vertical nystagmus—an ominous sign. In true vertigo caused by BPPV, DH maneuvers will often confirm the diagnosis (sensitivity 60% to 90%, specificity 90% to 95%) (2,3). The patient is moved rapidly from a sitting to a supine position with the head turned at a 30-degree angle, first to one side and then to the other. A positive DH test includes precipitation of vertigo, latency of onset by a few seconds, rotational nystagmus, resolution within a minute, and lessened symptoms and nystagmus with prolonged latency on repeated testing (i.e., fatiguability). Lack of latency and fatiguability characterize vertigo caused by serious central lesions.
B. Neurologic examination serves to detect brainstem or CNS pathology.
C. Otoscopy can detect otitis media or cholesteatoma. Nystagmus with vertigo following positive or negative pressure applied to the tympanic membrane (pneumatic otoscopy) suggests a perilymphatic fistula.
D. Other provocative tests (forced hyperventilation, vestibulo-ocular reflex testing, vigorous horizontal head shaking) are not routinely helpful.
Testing
A. Clinical laboratory tests. Most (80% to 90%) patients will need no laboratory testing (2,4,5). Audiometry is suggested if tinnitus or hearing loss is present. Blood tests are dictated by appropriate clinical indications only. Brainstem auditory-evoked responses can help elucidate multiple sclerosis. Holter monitoring is indicated if arrhythmias are suspected. Specialized testing—posturography, rotational chair testing, electronystagamography—is best ordered by a consultant.
B. Diagnostic imaging. Consider Doppler ultrasound for suspected transient ischemic attack and magnetic resonance imaging if CNS lesions are suspected.
Diagnostic assessment
A comprehensive history can categorize the patient’s problem as one of vertigo, presyncope, disequilibrium, or other (atypical). PE maneuvers (especially DH testing), detection of nystagmus, and assessment of neurologic function will further pinpoint the likely diagnosis. It is helpful to remember that true vertigo results most often from peripheral vestibular disorders, presyncope from cardiovascular dysfunction, disequilibrium from neurologic disorders, and other (atypical or vague) symptoms from psychological or psychiatric disease.
References
1. Sloane PD. Dizziness in primary care: results from the National Ambulatory Medical Care Survey. J Fam Pract 1989;29:33–38.
2. Derebery MJ. The diagnosis and treatment of dizziness. Med Clin North Am 1999;83:163–176.
3. Walker JS, Barnes SB. Dizziness—the difficult diagnosis. Emerg Med Clin North Am 1998;16:845–878.
4. Sloane PD. Evaluation and management of dizziness in the older patient. Clin Geriatr Med 1996;12:785–801.
5. Drachman DA. Clinical crossroads—a 69-year-old man with chronic dizziness. JAMA 1998;280:2111–2118. >
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Source: The 10-Minute Diagnosis Manual: Symptoms and Signs in the Time-Limited Encounter, 2000
Vertigo:
Physical assessment
(Signs & Symptoms: A 2-in-1 Reference for Nurses)
Perform a neurologic assessment, focusing particularly on eighth cranial nerve function. Observe the patient’s gait and posture for abnormalities.
» READ BOOK EXCERPT ONLINE »
Source: Signs & Symptoms: A 2-in-1 Reference for Nurses, 2007
Vertigo:
Diagnostic Approach
(The Diagnostic Approach to Symptoms and Signs in Pediatrics)
Once presenceof vertigo has been established, next step is to determine whetherdisturbance is in peripheral or central vestibular system or whetherit is psychologic.Important information is age of child;whether vertigo is acute, recurrent, or chronic; presence of hearingloss, ear pain, or tinnitus; and any history of recent trauma ordrug ingestion.Complete physical exam should be performed,focusing on otologic and neurologic exams.Vertigo caused by disturbance of peripheralvestibular system often occurs suddenly, lasts short time, and isunassociated with loss of consciousness. Sudden change in head positionfrequently precipitates episode. Nausea, vomiting, tinnitus, hearingloss, and swaying or falling toward affected side are common findings.Nystagmus is inhibited by visual fixation and may change with headposition.Disturbance in central vestibular systemcan cause recurrent or chronic vertigo, which may be accompaniedby cranial nerve deficits, pyramidal signs, and cerebellar signs.If nystagmus occurs, it does not change with head position, noris it inhibited by visual fixation.The history and physical exam are diagnosticin many cases of vertigo. Audiologic testing or brainstem evokedresponses should be performed with suspected hearing loss.CT should be performed if there ishistory of acute head trauma. Otherwise, MRI is study of choiceif neuroimaging is indicated. Electroencephalography is useful ifseizures are suspected.
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Source: The Diagnostic Approach to Symptoms and Signs in Pediatrics, 2006
Vertigo:
History and physical examination
(Nursing: Interpreting Signs and Symptoms)
Ask your patient to describe the onset and duration of his vertigo, being careful to distinguish this symptom from dizziness. Does he feel that he's moving or that his surroundings are moving around him? How often do the attacks occur? Do they follow position changes, or are they unpredictable? Find out if the patient can walk during an attack, if he leans to one side, and if he has ever fallen. Ask whether he experiences motion sickness and if he prefers one position during an attack. Obtain a recent drug history, and note evidence of alcohol abuse.
Perform a neurologic assessment, focusing particularly on eighth cranial nerve function. Observe the patient's gait and posture for abnormalities.
» READ BOOK EXCERPT ONLINE »
Source: Nursing: Interpreting Signs and Symptoms, 2007
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