Balance disturbances Flashcards

1
Q

What is required for good balance?

A

input from the vestibular system to be integrated centrally with proprioceptive and visual inputs

can be caused by disorders at the level of the vestibular apparatus, cerebellum or brainstem, extrapyramidal, spinal cord, or neuromuscular system.

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2
Q

What is vertigo?

A

the hallucination of movement
Pass med: false sensation that the body or environment is moving

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3
Q

What are central and peripheral causes of vertigo?

A

Central:
stroke
Migraine
neoplasms
demyelination e..g MS
Drugs

peripheral:
BPPV
Meniere’s disease
Vestibular Neuronitis

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3
Q

What are central and peripheral causes of vertigo?

A

Central:
stroke
Migraine
neoplasms
demyelination e..g MS
Drugs

peripheral:
BPPV
Meniere’s disease
Vestibular Neuronitis

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4
Q

What is the pathophysiology behind BPPV?

A

Peripheral vestibular disorder that manifests as sudden, short-lived episodes of vertigo elicited by specific head movements.

otoliths (crystals) in the semicircular canals (often posterior) cause abnormal stimulation of the hair cells giving the hallucination of movement - vertigo

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5
Q

What are som RF for BPPV?

A

increasing age, female sex, head trauma, vestibular neuronitis, labyrinthitis, migraines, inner ear surgery, Meniere’s disease

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6
Q

How does BPPV present?

A

specific provoking positions
brief / episodic vertigo
severe and sudden onset vertigo
nausea / lightheaded

Relevant negatives:
absence of other otological symptoms e.g. hearing loss / tinnitis/ aural fullness

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7
Q

How do you diagnose and treat BPPV?

A

Diagnosis: Dix-Hallpike- Rotatory nystagmus

Treatment: Epley manoeuvre

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8
Q

What is Meniere’s disease?

A

disorder of the inner ear of unknown cause.

Characterised by excessive pressure and progressive dilation due to increased fluid in the endolymphatic system

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9
Q

What are the clincial features of Meniere’s disease?

A

Recurrent episodic vertigo (+ nausea & vomiting) lasting mins to hours

tinnitus in affected

Fluctuating sensorineural hearing loss

Aural fullness

nystagmus and a positive Romberg test

bilateral symptoms may develop after a number of years

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10
Q

How does Mernieres disease progress over years?

A

initially - pt well between attacks

then: reduced vestibular function/ sensorineural hearing loss means feel unsteady between attacks

then: disease burns itself, no more acute vertigo but reduced hearing and generally unbalanced

if they have a good ear pt can compensate

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11
Q

Management of Menieres? (workbook)

A

Diet :
reduce salt / choc / alcohol / caffeine

Medical :
Thiazide diuretic e.g. bendrofluaxide
Betahistine
Vestibular sedatives e.g. prochlorperazine for ACUTE ATTACKS

Surgical:
Grommets
Dexamethasone middle ear injection
Endolymph§atic sac decompression

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12
Q

What must pts with Menieres be advised to do that might affect day to day life ?

A

Inform the DVLA- cant drive until control symptoms

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13
Q

What are some complications of Menieres?

A

Falls

Profound hearing loss

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14
Q

What is vestibular neuronitis?

A

inflammation of the vestibular nerve often due to viral infection. Can cause severe incapacitating vertigo

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15
Q

When often precedes vestibular neuronitis?

A

viral infection

16
Q

What are the features of vestibular neuronitis?

A

recurrent vertigo attacks lasting hours or days

nausea and vomiting

horizontal nystagmus (during attacks but otherwise normal neuro exam)

no hearing loss or tinnitus

17
Q

What are some differentials for vestibular neuronitis?

A

viral labyrinthitis

posterior circulation stroke- (HiNTs exam can be used to distinguish vestibular neuronitis from posterior circulation stroke)

18
Q

Treatment for vestibular neuronitis?

A

oral / IM prochlorperazine (vestibular sedative) - rapid help for severe cases

short oral course of prochlorperazine, or an antihistamine e.g.cyclizine for less severe cases

IV fluids if needed

vestibular rehabilitation exercises for pts with chronic symptoms of vestibular deficit after acute episodes e.g. Cawthorne-Cooksey exercises