Incidence, characteristics, and neuroanatomical substrates of vestibular symptoms in supratentorial stroke.

J Neurol

Department of Neurology, Pusan National University Hospital, Pusan National University School of Medicine and Biomedical Research Institute, College of Medicine, 179, Gudeok-Ro, Seo-Gu, Busan, 602-739, Korea.

Published: April 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study explores the incidence and features of acute vestibular symptoms in patients with supratentorial stroke, revealing that 3.7% of 1301 patients experienced these symptoms.
  • Among patients with vestibular symptoms, common abnormal findings included spontaneous nystagmus, impaired smooth pursuit, and tilted subjective visual vertical, while video head impulse and caloric tests were normal.
  • There was no significant correlation found between acute vestibular symptoms and specific brain areas, nor was there a lateralization of lesions in unilateral stroke cases.

Article Abstract

The incidence and characteristics of acute vestibular symptoms, responsible structures, and lateralization of the causative lesions in supratentorial stroke remain unknown. This study aimed to determine the incidence, clinical features, and anatomical correlation of acute vestibular symptoms in supratentorial stroke. We performed a prospective, multicenter, observational study that had recruited patients with supratentorial stroke from the neurology clinics of referral-based four university hospitals in Korea. All patients received a constructed neuro-otological evaluations, and neuroimaging. We analyzed the incidence of acute vestibular symptoms, abnormal ocular motor and vestibular function tests, and stroke lesions. Of 1301 patients with supratentorial stroke, 48 (3.7%) presented with acute vestibular symptoms, and 13 of them (1%) had the vestibular symptoms in isolation. In patients with acute vestibular symptoms, abnormal findings included spontaneous nystagmus (5%), impaired horizontal smooth pursuit (41%), and abnormal tilt of the subjective visual vertical (SVV) (20%). Video head impulse and caloric tests were normal in all the patients. There was no clear correlation between acute vestibular symptoms and involvement of specific vestibular cortex. In patients with unilateral stroke, there was also no lateralization of the causative lesions of acute vestibular symptoms (left vs. right; 52 vs. 48%), even in patients with vertigo (left vs. right; 58 vs. 42%). This study demonstrates that the incidence of acute vestibular symptoms in supratentorial stroke is 3.7%, with being isolated in 1%. The widespread lesions responsible for acute vestibular symptoms implicate diffuse multisensory cortical-subcortical networks in the cerebral hemispheres without a lateralization.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00415-023-11566-9DOI Listing

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