Dizzy Patient Flashcards

1
Q

Define vertigo

A

Sensation of movement usually spinning

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2
Q

What symptoms would indicate a cardiac cause of dizziness?

A

Lightheadedness, syncope, palpitations

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3
Q

What symptoms would indicate a neurological cause of dizziness?

A

Blackouts, visual disturbance, tingling, weakness

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4
Q

If the dizziness lasts seconds what is the likely cause?

A

Benign positional paroxysmal vertigo

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5
Q

If the dizziness lasts hours what is the likely cause?

A

Menieres

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6
Q

If the dizziness lasts days what are two possible causes?

A

Vestibular Neuritits

Labyrinthitis

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7
Q

Describe the symptoms of menieres

A

hearing loss, tinnitus, aural pressure

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8
Q

What symptoms can be associated with vestibular neuritis?

A

Nausea and vomitting

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9
Q

What is the commonest cause of vertigo?

A

BPPV

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10
Q

What causes BPPV?

A

Head trauma, ear surgery, idiopathic

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11
Q

Describe the pathology of BPPV

A

Otoconia from the utricle becomes displaced into the semicircular ducts - most commonly the posterior semicircular canal

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12
Q

When does vertigo in BPPV often occur?

A
Looking up 
Turning in bed
Lying down at night 
Getting up in the morning 
Bending/rising 
Moving head quickly
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13
Q

What is the test used to diagnose BPPV?

A

Dix Hallpike test

Sit up on couch with eyes open, turn head 45 degrees and slowly lower down

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14
Q

What characteristics of BPPV will be seen in the dix hall pike test?

A

Symptomatic, nystagmus, vertical/torsional geotropic

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15
Q

Name three methods of treatment for BPPV

A
  • Epley manoeuvre
  • Semout manoeuvre
  • Brandt-Daroff
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16
Q

Describe the epley manoeuvre

A
  1. Patient lies on couch with affected ear towards floor
  2. Head is rotated 90 degrees to the other side
  3. Then a further 90 degrees by getting the patient to run onto their side with head facing the floor
  4. With their chin to their chest the patient is brought back to sitting position
17
Q

What is the cause of menieres?

A

Unknown

18
Q

Describe the pathology of menieres

A

Endolymphatic hydrops - endolymph tube swells and increased pressure leads to rupture

19
Q

How will a patient with menieres present?

A

History of recurrent, spontaneous rotational vertigo with at least two episodes of >20 mins (usually hours).
Tinnitus, aural fullness and hearing loss

20
Q

How is menieres managed?

A

Supportive, tinnitus therapy, hearing aids and prevention of aggravating factors

21
Q

What medication can help menieres disease?

A

Gentamicin and steroids

22
Q

Describe the presentation of vertigo associated with migraines

A

Phonophobia, fluctuating/acute hearing loss (small percentage)

23
Q

How are vertigo related migraines treated?

A

Avoid triggers - caffeine, chocolate, citrus fruit

Pharmacological management - abortive (triptans) or prophylactic (propranolol, amitriptyline)

24
Q

What might a vertical nystagmus indicate?

A

A problem in the brain stem

25
Q

What is vestibular neuritis and labyrinthitis associated with?

A

Upper respiratory infections

26
Q

What is the difference between vestibular neuronitis and labyrinthitis?

A

Labyrinthitis is associated with tinnitus/hearing loss

27
Q

What is the management of labyrinthitis/vestibular neuronitis?

A

Vestibular sedatives (anti-histamine, anti-emetic)
Fluids
Rehab exercises