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Capturing nystagmus in the emergency room: posterior circulation stroke versus acute vestibular neuritis.

Authors :
Nham, B.
Akdal, G.
Young, A. S.
Özçelik, P.
Tanrıverdizade, T.
Ala, R. T.
Bradshaw, A. P.
Wang, C.
Men, S.
Giarola, B. F.
Black, D. A.
Thompson, E. O.
Halmagyi, G. M.
Welgampola, M. S.
Source :
Journal of Neurology; Feb2023, Vol. 270 Issue 2, p632-641, 10p
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Objectives: To compare acute nystagmus characteristics of posterior circulation stroke (PCS) and acute vestibular neuritis (AVN) in the emergency room (ER) within 24 h of presentation. Methods: ER-based video-nystagmography (VNG) was conducted, recording ictal nystagmus in 101 patients with PCS (on imaging) and 104 patients with AVN, diagnosed on accepted clinical and vestibular test criteria. Results: Patients with stroke in the brainstem (38/101, affecting midbrain (n = 7), pons (n = 19), and medulla (n = 12)), cerebellum (31/101), both (15/101) or other locations (17/101) were recruited. Common PCS territories included posterior-inferior-cerebellar-artery (41/101), pontine perforators (18/101), multiple-territories (17/101) and anterior-inferior-cerebellar-artery (7/101). In PCS, 44/101 patients had no spontaneous nystagmus. Remaining PCS patients had primary position horizontal (44/101), vertical (8/101) and torsional (5/101) nystagmus. Horizontal nystagmus was 50% ipsiversive and 50% contraversive in lateralised PCS. Most PCS patients with horizontal nystagmus (28/44) had unidirectional "peripheral-appearing" nystagmus. 32/101 of PCS patients had gaze-evoked nystagmus. AVN affected the superior, inferior or both divisions of the vestibular nerve in 55/104, 4/104 and 45/104. Most (102/104) had primary position horizontal nystagmus; none had gaze-evoked nystagmus. Two inferior VN patients had contraversive torsional-downbeat nystagmus. Horizontal nystagmus with SPV ≥ 5.8 °/s separated AVN from PCS with sensitivity and specificity of 91.2% and 83.0%. Absent nystagmus, gaze-evoked nystagmus, and vertical-torsional nystagmus were highly specific for PCS (100%, 100% and 98.1%). Conclusion: Nystagmus is often absent in PCS and always present in AVN. Unidirectional 'peripheral-appearing' horizontal nystagmus can be seen in PCS. ER-based VNG nystagmus assessment could provide useful diagnostic information when separating PCS from AVN. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03405354
Volume :
270
Issue :
2
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Journal of Neurology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
161579918
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00415-022-11202-y