AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to differentiate between posterior-circulation stroke (PCS) and vestibular-neuritis (VN) using quantitative vestibular tests conducted on patients within 72 hours of their hospital visit.
  • A total of 128 PCS and 134 VN patients were analyzed, revealing key differences in test results such as nystagmus patterns and severities, which were more pronounced in VN than in PCS.
  • The findings demonstrated that specific vestibular tests could reliably distinguish VN from PCS, achieving high sensitivity (92.9%) and specificity (89.8%), especially when combined with standard bedside assessments.

Article Abstract

Objectives: To separate posterior-circulation stroke (PCS) and vestibular-neuritis (VN) using quantitative vestibular tests.

Methods: Patients were prospectively recruited from the emergency room within 72 h of presentation. Video-nystagmography (VNG), three-dimensional video head-impulse testing (vHIT), vestibular-evoked myogenic potentials (VEMPs), and subjective visual-horizontal (SVH) were performed.

Results: There were 128 PCS and 134 VN patients. Common stroke-territories were: posterior-inferior cerebellar artery, basilar-perforators, multi-territory and anterior-inferior cerebellar artery (41.4%, 21.1%, 14.1%, 7.8%). VN included superior, inferior and pan-neuritis (53.3%, 4.2%, and 41.5%). Most VN and stroke patients presented with acute vestibular syndrome (96.6%, 61.7%). In VN, we recorded horizontal (98.5%) or vertical/torsional spontaneous nystagmus (1.5%) and in PCS, absent-nystagmus (53.9%), horizontal (32%) or vertical/torsional (14.1%) nystagmus. The mean slow-phase velocity of horizontal nystagmus was faster in VN than PCS (11.8 ± 7.2 and 5.2 ± 3.0°/s, p < 0.01). Ipsilesional horizontal-canal (HC) vHIT-gain was lower in VN than in stroke (0.47 ± 0.24, 0.92 ± 0.20, p < 0.001). Ipsilesional catch-up saccades occurred earlier, and their amplitude, prevalence, and velocity were greater in VN than PCS (p < 0.01). Ipsilesional SVH deviation > 2.5° occurred more often in VN than in stroke (97.6% and 24.3%, p < 0.01). Abnormal bone-conducted ocular-VEMP asymmetry ratio was more common in VN than PCS (50% and 14.4%, p < 0.01). Using the ten best discriminators (VNG, vHIT, SVH, and oVEMP metrics), VN was separated from PCS with a sensitivity of 92.9% and specificity of 89.8%. Adding VNG and vHIT to the bedside head-impulse-nystagmus-and-test-of-skew (HINTS) test enhanced sensitivity and specificity from 95.3% and 63.4% to 96.5% and 80.6%.

Conclusion: Quantitative vestibular testing helps separate stroke from vestibular neuritis and, when used, could improve diagnostic accuracy in the emergency room.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00415-022-11473-5DOI Listing

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