AM Report: BPPV

semicircular canal

Thank you to Dr. Nandita Sriram for an excellent review of vertigo!

Learning Points:

— Taking a good history is pertinent in distinguishing between dizziness vs true vertigo

— Differentiate between peripheral vs central etiologies of vertigo

  • Peripheral causes: BPPV, vestibular neuronitis, meniere disease, acoustic neuroma, otitis media, aminoglycoside toxicity, perilymphatic fistula, Ramsey Hunt syndrome
  • Central causes: vestibular migraine, brainstem ischemia, cerebellar infarction or hemorrhage, chiari malformation, multiple sclerosis

— Characteristic physical findings for peripheral etiologies include horizontal or horizontal-torsional nystagmus which suppresses with visual fixation, whereas with central etiologies, characteristic findings include horizontal, vertical or torsional nystagmus which does not suppress with visual fixation

— MRI is only indicated if there is a high clinical suspicion for central causes and exam with pertinent neurological findings

— Enjoy these great review articles on vertigo and BPPV!