Search results for "VESTIBULAR"
showing 10 items of 183 documents
Sensory strategies of postural sway during quiet stance in patients with haemophilic arthropathy.
2017
Introduction: The sensory strategies of postural control in adult haemophilic arthropathy patients are still poorly understood. Aim: To determine sensorial posture-control strategies through postural sway frequency analysis when in a bipedal quiet stance with and without visual stimulus deprivation in healthy subjects and patients with haemophilic arthropathy. Secondarily, to determine the irregularity of postural balance control through sample entropy (SampEn). Methods: A triaxial accelerometer attached at the L3 level determined the displacement and acceleration of the centre of mass (DCoM and ACoM, respectively) under open-and closed-eyes conditions. Sensorial strategies were studied by …
Comparison of electronystagmography results with dynamic posturography findings in patients with vestibular schwannoma.
2007
Condition-5-score (C5S) and condition-6-score (C6S) of computerized dynamic platform posturography (CDPP) can detect the presence of a functional deficit of the lateral semicircular canal (and the superior vestibular nerve), irrespective of the central vestibular compensatory status, in vestibular schwannoma (VS) patients.To test whether CDPP findings differ between VS patients with and without asymmetry on caloric and/or rotational ENG studies.This was a retrospective review of 216 consecutive patients with VS. C5S and C6S of CDPP (Equitest) were compared among patients with normal caloric and rotational studies, patients with asymmetry on caloric studies and normal rotational studies, and…
Dynamic posturography findings predict balance status in vestibular schwannoma patients.
2007
OBJECTIVE To test whether condition 5 score (C5S) and condition 6 score (C6S) of the sensory organization test of computerized dynamic platform posturography (CDPP) differ between vestibular schwannoma (VS) patients with and without vestibular symptoms. STUDY DESIGN Retrospective review of prospectively collected data. SETTING Tertiary academic referral center. PATIENTS Two hundred and sixteen consecutive patients with a histological diagnosis of a VS (103 women; 113 men; age range, 18-78 years; median, 54 years) who had been preoperatively evaluated by CDPP. A hundred and twelve patients had a history of vertigo, dizziness, and/or imbalance, and 104 patients had neither present nor past ve…
MRI and neurophysiology in vestibular paroxysmia: contradiction and correlation
2013
Background Vestibular paroxysmia (VP) is defined as neurovascular compression (NVC) syndrome of the eighth cranial nerve (N.VIII). The aim was to assess the sensitivity and specificity of MRI and the significance of audiovestibular testing in the diagnosis of VP. Methods 20 VP patients and, for control, 20 subjects with trigeminal neuralgia (TN) were included and underwent MRI (constructive interference in steady-state, time-of-flight MR angiography) for detection of a NVC between N.VIII and vessels. All VP patients received detailed audiovestibular testing. Results A NVC of N.VIII could be detected in all VP patients rendering a sensitivity of 100% and a specificity of 65% for the diagnosi…
Evidence of unilateral isolated utricular hypofunction
2010
The findings demonstrate that an enduring unilateral utricular dysfunction, possibly together with canal hypofunction, can occur after labyrinthine disease or injury. They also suggest that unilateral, isolated utricular dysfunction - or utricle paresis - can occur, representing a novel entity in the differential diagnosis of peripheral vestibular function. The occurrence of subjective visual vertical (SVV) asymmetry in the presence of symmetric vestibular evoked myogenic potentials (VEMPs) also confirms that the information from the utricles, rather than the saccules, dominates SVV estimation.To determine the incidence of unilateral utricular hypofunction.The retrospective clinical study d…
Relationship between video head impulse test (vHIT) and caloric test in patients with vestibular neuritis.
2016
Abstract Introduction and objectives The caloric test is the gold standard for the loss of vestibular function diagnosis. The video head impulse test (vHIT) assesses the same reflex by using a video-assisted examination of the impulsive manoeuvre. We intend to compare the variation of results of the vHIT and the caloric test in patients with vestibular neuritis with respect to their initial condition at two different moments of their evolution and to check the level of correlation between them and with that of the DHI test. Methods We explored 20 patients with neuritis by using both vHIT and the caloric test on the same day. We assessed the correlation between these two tests and with the D…
Torsional eye movement responses to monaural and binaural galvanic vestibular stimulation: side-to-side asymmetries.
2003
Vestibular stimulation by head accelerations always involves multisensory activation of the vestibular, somatosensory, and visual systems. Over the past few years, galvanic vestibular stimulation (GVS) has become increasingly popular for testing vestibular function for clinical and research purposes. Although GVS provides a nonphysiological stimulation, it is more selective than natural head accelerations and is thus an attractive tool for such tests. Eye movement responses elicited by GVS mainly consist of torsional and horizontal components, as first described by Hitzig in 1871. Animal experiments have shown that GVS increases the vestibular afferent spike frequency at the cathodal site a…
Static posturography with dynamic tests. Usefulness of biomechanical parameters in assessing vestibular patients.
2012
Abstract Introduction and objective Posturography allows us in evaluating postural control. This study showed the posturographic parameters that were useful for assessing the functional ability to maintain balance in our sample of vestibular patients. Material and methods Of a total of 89 patients, 59 were healthy subjects and 30 had a peripheral vestibular disorder. The subjects were studied using the posturographic NedSVE/IBV system, combining static (Romberg) and dynamic (stability limits and rhythmic weight shifts) tests. We then compared the measurements found in the groups. Results Normal subjects showed significantly lower oscillations than our patients in all of the posturographic p…
Benign paroxysmal positional vertigo following whiplash injury: a myth or a reality?
2011
Abstract Objective The aim of the study was to evaluate the true incidence, diagnosis, and treatment of benign paroxysmal positional vertigo (BPPV) arising after whiplash injury and to distinguish this type of posttraumatic vertigo from other types of dizziness complained after trauma. Methods This was a retrospective study comprising patients referred to our center after whiplash injury. The patients were evaluated with neurotologic examination including bedside and instrumental tests. A Dizziness Handicap Inventory evaluating the symptoms of patients was submitted before and after treatment and was evaluated. The BPPV patients were separately evaluated from those with cervicogenic vertigo…
Seventh nerve palsies may be the only clinical sign of small pontine infarctions in diabetic and hypertensive patients
2002
Backgroud: Small brainstem infarctions are increasingly recognized as a cause of isolated ocular motor and vestibular nerve palsies in diabetic and/or hypertensive patients. This raises the question whether there are also isolated 7th nerve palsies due to pontine infarctions in patients with such risk factors for the development of cerebrovascular diseases. Methods: Over an 11-year-period, we retrospectively identified 10 diabetic and/or hypertensive patients with isolated 7th nerve palsies and electrophysiological abnormalities indicating pontine dysfunction. All patients had examinations of masseter and blink reflexes, brainstem auditory evoked potentials, direct current electro-oculograp…