Bed side examination of the dizzy patient Herman Kingma, ORL-HNS department.

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bed side examination of the dizzy patient Herman Kingma, ORL-HNS department

Transcript of Bed side examination of the dizzy patient Herman Kingma, ORL-HNS department.

Page 1: Bed side examination of the dizzy patient Herman Kingma, ORL-HNS department.

bed side examination of the dizzy patientHerman Kingma, ORL-HNS department

Page 2: Bed side examination of the dizzy patient Herman Kingma, ORL-HNS department.

- history, examination and explanation require 20-30 minutes

- take the complaints of the patient seriously:

so, if you lack time ask patient to return for a special consultation

history + bedside-examination + explanation

Page 3: Bed side examination of the dizzy patient Herman Kingma, ORL-HNS department.

• which complaints are related to vestibular deficits ?

• patients often do not know which complaints are

associated with peripheral vestibular dysfunction

• patients often think and are afraid that the complaints point

to a brain dysfunction

• complaints are frequently a complex mixture of acute ….

and sustained symptoms !!!

history

Page 4: Bed side examination of the dizzy patient Herman Kingma, ORL-HNS department.

when taking the history assume that there were and are

acute transient and sustained vestibular complaints

untill you find out that that is not the case

history: my tip

Page 5: Bed side examination of the dizzy patient Herman Kingma, ORL-HNS department.

image stabilisation

balance control

spatial orientation

interpretationlearning

adaptationcompensation

CNS

labyrinths

visiongravitoreceptors

hearing

somatosensoryfoot sole pressure

circadian rhythmautonomic processes

blood pressure heart beat frequency respiration rate

Page 6: Bed side examination of the dizzy patient Herman Kingma, ORL-HNS department.

acute loss or fluctuating peripheral vestibular function

transient: vertigo, nausea, falling / imbalance

remaining peripheral vestibular function loss

sustained: - not feeling well, slight nausea- loss of balance at low speeds or complex situations- reduced dynamic visual acuity- reduced ability to discriminate between

self-motion and environmental motion- secondary: fear and fatigue

symptoms of vestibular dysfunction

Page 7: Bed side examination of the dizzy patient Herman Kingma, ORL-HNS department.

patient with severe bilateral vestibular hyporeflexia

slow tandem walk fast tandem walk

Page 8: Bed side examination of the dizzy patient Herman Kingma, ORL-HNS department.

cmesthal

cortex

pons cer

vn

omn

cgl

VOR: 8 msec OKR and Smooth pursuit: >75 msec

Page 9: Bed side examination of the dizzy patient Herman Kingma, ORL-HNS department.
Page 10: Bed side examination of the dizzy patient Herman Kingma, ORL-HNS department.

simulation of oscillopsia reduced dynamic visual acuityin case of bilateral vestibular areflexia

Page 11: Bed side examination of the dizzy patient Herman Kingma, ORL-HNS department.

acute loss or fluctuating peripheral vestibular function

transient: vertigo, nausea, falling / imbalance

remaining peripheral vestibular function loss

sustained: - not feeling well, slight nausea- loss of balance at low speeds or complex situations- reduced dynamic visual acuity- reduced ability to discriminate between

self-motion and environmental motion- secondary: fear and fatigue

Page 12: Bed side examination of the dizzy patient Herman Kingma, ORL-HNS department.

• single episode of prolonged vertigo + sustained complaints

• recurrent vertigo + sustained complaints

• recurrent dizziness + sustained complaints

• positional vertigo, less often sustained complaints

• chronic dizziness, impaired visual acuity, unsteadiness

5 major patternsBronstein and Lempert

”Dizziness”

Page 13: Bed side examination of the dizzy patient Herman Kingma, ORL-HNS department.

a vestibular function loss implies

permanent impairment

analogue to hearing and visual losses

… and neuroplasticity differs per patient…!

Page 14: Bed side examination of the dizzy patient Herman Kingma, ORL-HNS department.

bed-side examination

Page 15: Bed side examination of the dizzy patient Herman Kingma, ORL-HNS department.

bed-side examination

balance• observe patient at entrance

Romberg eo/ec, tandem walk slow vs fastoculomotor• gaze and fixation• convergation / amblyopia / cover test / skew deviation• pursuit and saccadesstatic vestibulo-ocular stability• spontaneous nystagmus*positioning • Hallpike AD/AS * + barbecue AD/AS *VOR• head shake 3D VOR + OCR*• head shake nystagmus test*• head impulse test (H/V)additional• fixation suppression test• test for fistula and Tullio phenomenon * preferrably with

Frenzels glasses

Page 16: Bed side examination of the dizzy patient Herman Kingma, ORL-HNS department.

without Frenzel’s glasses1. observe patient’s gait / posture2. Romberg + tandem

if abnormal: past pointing test3. gaze and fixation4. convergence, amblyopia,

cover test, skew deviation5. pursuit6. saccades

with Frenzel’s glasses6. spontaneous nystagmus7. Hallpike + HC-test8. 3d VOR + OCR9. head shake nystagmus test

without Frenzel’s glasses10. head impulse test (H/V)11. fixation suppression test12. observe patient’s gait / posture

specific bed-side examinationof the vestibular function

Page 17: Bed side examination of the dizzy patient Herman Kingma, ORL-HNS department.

spontaneous eyes open nystagmus

vertical, horizontal symmetric or pendular

always central (acquired or congenital)

1st, 2nd or 3rd degree horizontal

mostly peripheral sometimes central

Page 18: Bed side examination of the dizzy patient Herman Kingma, ORL-HNS department.
Page 19: Bed side examination of the dizzy patient Herman Kingma, ORL-HNS department.

impact of visual fixation upon nystagmus

nystagmus increases by visual fixation

always central (acquired or congenital)

nystagmus decreases upon visual fixation

always peripheral

Page 20: Bed side examination of the dizzy patient Herman Kingma, ORL-HNS department.

Hallpike

Hallpike

leftright

Hallpike

sidewardsor mid-Hallpike

right PC-canalolithiasis or cupulolithiasis

left PC-canalolithiasis or cupulolithiasis

left or right AC canalolithiasis or cupulolithiasis

right HC-canalolithiasis

sidewardsor mid-Hallpike

PC canalolithiasis or cupulolithiasis: most common peripheral vestibular dysfunction

Page 21: Bed side examination of the dizzy patient Herman Kingma, ORL-HNS department.

Hallpike

Hallpike

sidewardsor Hallpike

left PC-canalolithiasis

left or right AC canalolithiasis or cupulolithiasis

right HC-canalolithiasis geotropic

left HC-canalolithiasis geotropic

right HC-cupulolithiasis apo-geotropic

left HC-cupulolithiasis apo-geotropic

sidewardsor Hallpike

sidewardsor Hallpike

sidewardsor Hallpike

right left

Page 22: Bed side examination of the dizzy patient Herman Kingma, ORL-HNS department.

Hallpike

Hallpike

leftright

Hallpike

sidewardsor mid-Hallpike

right PC-canalolithiasis

left PC-canalolithiasis

left or right AC canalolithiasis or cupulolithiasis

right HC-canalolithiasis

left HC-canalolithiasis

right HC-cupulolithiasis

left HC-cupulolithiasis

sidewardsor mid-Hallpike

sidewardsor mid-Hallpike

sidewardsor mid-Hallpike

exclude neurological origin of a down beat nystagmus

Page 23: Bed side examination of the dizzy patient Herman Kingma, ORL-HNS department.

normal tests: if history points to deficit

manage patientin line with the history

(but no ablative therapies)

Page 24: Bed side examination of the dizzy patient Herman Kingma, ORL-HNS department.

optimal patient management: reality

• a vestibular deficit implies permanent function loss

• stimulation of neuroplasticity and use of rehabilitation exercises in natural environment improve function:

time is valuable: act fast

• frequently only the history points to a vestibular deficit

• explaining the relation between the deficit and the complaints forms the keystone of the therapy,

allowing the patient to cope with his or her problems