Abstracts
The authors highlights the importance of the vestibulo-ocular reflex examination through the head impulse test as a diagnostic method for vestibular dysfunction as well as, and primarily, a bedside semiotic resource capable of differentiating between acute peripheral vestibulopathy and a cerebellar or brainstem infarction in emergency rooms.
Head Impulse Test; nystagmus; dizziness; acute peripheral vestibulopathy; stroke
Os autores ressaltam a importância do exame do reflexo vestíbulo-ocular por meio do teste do impulso da cabeça como método diagnóstico de hipofunção vestibular. Este método é também - e principalmente - um instrumento semiótico de beira do leito capaz de auxiliar no diagnóstico diferencial entre a vestibulopatia periférica aguda e o infarto cerebelar ou do tronco cerebral na sala de emergência.
Teste do Impulso da Cabeça; nistagmo; tontura; vestibulopatia periférica aguda; acidente vascular cerebral
SPECIAL ARTICLE
Vestibulo-ocular reflex and the head impulse test
Reflexo vestíbulo-ocular e o teste do impulso da cabeça
Eliana T. MaranhãoI; Péricles Maranhão-FilhoII
IPT, MSc, certified by the American Physical Therapy Association for Vestibular Rehabilitation, Alexandria VA, USA
IIProfessor of Neurology at Clementino Fraga Filho Hospital, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro (UFRJ), Rio de Janeiro RJ, Brazil
Correspondence Correspondence: Eliana Teixeira Maranhão Avenida das Américas 1.155 / sala 1.705 22631-000 Rio de Janeiro RJ - Brasil E-mail: limaranhao@gmail.com
ABSTRACT
The authors highlights the importance of the vestibulo-ocular reflex examination through the head impulse test as a diagnostic method for vestibular dysfunction as well as, and primarily, a bedside semiotic resource capable of differentiating between acute peripheral vestibulopathy and a cerebellar or brainstem infarction in emergency rooms.
Key words: Head Impulse Test, nystagmus, dizziness, acute peripheral vestibulopathy, stroke.
RESUMO
Os autores ressaltam a importância do exame do reflexo vestíbulo-ocular por meio do teste do impulso da cabeça como método diagnóstico de hipofunção vestibular. Este método é também e principalmente um instrumento semiótico de beira do leito capaz de auxiliar no diagnóstico diferencial entre a vestibulopatia periférica aguda e o infarto cerebelar ou do tronco cerebral na sala de emergência.
Palavras-Chave: Teste do Impulso da Cabeça, nistagmo, tontura, vestibulopatia periférica aguda, acidente vascular cerebral.
Vertigo and dizziness are among the most frequent complaints in medical practice. These are symptoms that become more common with age, and therefore indicate a higher prevalence in a not too distant future1,2. The history and the neuro-otological examination of these patients are essential in identifying any underlying disease. Except for some otolaryngologists, the vast majority of professionals interested in investigating and treating vestibular symptoms, including vestibular rehabilitation therapists and general neurologists, is not armed with the necessary tools for the investigation of the vestibular system. Hence the importance of simple and effective bedside tests like the head impulse test (HIT) which does not depend on instruments in evaluating patients with vertigo, dizziness, and imbalance complaints3. The authors highlight the importance of routine tests of vestibulo-ocular reflex (VOR) through the HIT, as well as in the emergency care department.
VESTIBULO-OCULAR REFLEX
The VOR is a phylogenetic old and simple reflex that involves only three neuronal pathways4. The first goes from the peripheral vestibular organs to the vestibular nuclei lateral, medial, superior, and inferior besides a number of other small ones with little known functions5. The second goes from there to the oculomotor nuclei, and the third pathway reaches the extra-ocular muscles. The dynamic properties of the VOR mature in the first two months of human life; the amount of time required for visual information to become available and begin providing the necessary signals to stimulate the neuronal network for the reflex6. The VOR operates by generating eye movements at the same speed but in opposite direction to the head movement. Its function is to stabilize the image on the fovea during head movement, thus allowing the person to see a sharp and clean image even during movement. With a latency period of only 8 to 12 ms, this reflex is considered the fastest in humans.
The gain of the VOR is defined as "output" divided by "input." In order to keep the fovea fixed on the target, the "output"(VOR) has to be equal to the "input"(drive head) and the gain of VOR very close or equal to one7. If the vestibular system functions normally, when applying a high frequency stimulation (~122°/second) as a jerk to the head, the gain of the VOR is very close to 1 (0.94±0.08 standard deviation). In case of a very fast pulse (>10 Hz) the VOR is employed rather than the optokinetic system, resulting in a compensatory ocular deviation of the same magnitude and opposite direction in relation to the movement of the head. This keeps the eyes on target while the head rotates around the eyes7.
HEAD IMPULSE TEST
Described by Halmagyi and Curthoys8, in 1988, the HIT lends itself to detect unilateral or bilateral vestibular hypofunction through the VOR response, and is very easy to be applied. The examiner sits in front of the patient and asks the same to keep his eyes on the examiner's nose. The examiner holds the patient's head by the temporal-zygomatic region with both hands, inclining it forward at 30° in order to maintain the plane of the horizontal canal parallel the ground, and quickly turns the patient's head in the horizontal plane (±2,000°/sec2) alternating directions at random, and observes the patient's ability to keep the eyes fixed on target. The rotation does not need to be large (quite to the contrary only 5 to 10°), but must have a high acceleration rate and unpredictable direction and timing. Normal response means the eyes remain fixed on the target. The response is abnormal when a corrective eye saccade makes up the end of the head movement in order to re-target6,9,10 (Figure). The rotation of the head one side at a time stimulates the horizontal semicircular canal to the rotation side provoking the VOR and the eyes move to the opposite direction. The HIT may be carried out in other planes as well.
If a bilateral vestibular dysfunction exists, the saccade of re-fixation will occur with the head being quickly turned to both sides. In the original study conducted with 12 patients who underwent complete vestibular nerve unilateral section, Halmagyi and Curthoys8 demonstrated 100% sensitivity and specificity using the HIT on the injuried side. In incomplete unilateral hypofunction, the most frequent situation in daily practice, the HIT sensitivity varies from 34 to 100% and the specificity from 81 to 100%10. Schubert et al.12 found 71% sensitivity of the HIT in 79 patients with varying degrees of unilateral vestibular lesion and sensitivity of 84% in 32 patients with bilateral damage. The test's sensitivity increases when we look at three important details: 1) Tilting the patient's head 30° forward; 2) moving it at unpredictable direction and time intervals; and 3) performing the maneuver more than once12-14. The HIT, when performed through active movement, has a great chance of generating false negative result15.
Comparatively, the caloric response is analogous to a rotational stimulus of 0.003Hz (i.e. one cycle per 5.5 minutes), while the HIT represents a motion of high frequency characteristic to the movements that occur in normal daily life. It should be remembered that the peripheral vestibular disorders affect an early and more severe spectrum of low-frequency vestibular functions. This phenomenon greatly favors the caloric response, being more sensitive than the HIT in case of vestibular peripheral hypofunction. Because of this, in cases of moderated vestibular paresis (5075% of weakness) evaluated by the caloric test, the vast majority of patients (90%) present negative HIT7,14. In this regard, the partial results of an ongoing study in which several clinical bedside tests were applied to 13 migraine patients and 6 control patients (21 to 60 years old), Maranhão et al. found positive HIT in 26% of patients and in none of the controls, while 46% of migrainous patients and 50% of controls showed assymetric nystagmus (≥25%) in the minimal ice test, described by Leigh and Zee16 and Nelson17.
HEAD IMPULSE TEST IN MEDICAL EMERGENCY
In the emergency environment, the physical examination, diagnostic reasoning, and decision-making investigation (or therapeutic) requires accuracy, speed, and agility to distinguish the infarction of the posterior fossa of a more benign condition such as acute peripheral vestibulopathy (APV), which is not always easy. The computerized tomography is often not immediately revealing, specially in the case of ischemia in the posterior fossa, and magnetic resonance imaging is not always available. Thus, once again, taking a smart, refined, and fast bedside examination can be a great tool to reach the correct diagnosis. It is worth mentioning that about 25% of APV who seek emergency care presenting nausea, vomiting, dizziness, nystagmus, and imbalance are actually posterior circulating infarcts18.
In order to verify the accuracy of the HIT in the differential diagnosis of APV versus vascular cerebellar (or brainstem) accident (VCA), Newman-Toker et al.19 investigated 43 patients. Eight out of eight with APV showed positive (100%) HIT, while for 31 of 34 (91%) VCA patients the test was negative. However, the HIT is not 100% reliable in detection of APV since some patients with stroke involving the lateral pontine root entry zone or cerebellar infarction may present a positive HIT. Moreover, 16% of cases of stroke in the lower portion of the cerebellum showed initial clinical presentation of pseudo-labyrinthine with unidirectional nystagmus (peripheral pattern) and positive response to HIT. The authors highlight that a negative HIT was more important than a positive.
Kattah et al.18, aiming to clinically differentiate between APV and stroke, extended the above-mentioned work by evaluating 101 patients with APV (nausea/vomiting, nystagmus, dizziness, intolerance to head movements, unsteady of gait). They concluded that the set of three signals obtained by bedside examination; the head impulse test, nystagmus that change direction according to the glance, and the skew deviation test (which show vertical strabismus) (HINTS), are able to differentiate a stroke in the brainstem/cerebellum from APV. It is noteworthy that the bedside eye movement examination may provide the only way to differentiate between the APV and VCA. Vertical strabismus predicts stroke involving the brainstem even in the presence of a false positive HIT (pseudo-labyrinthine). The negative HIT associated with a nystagmus that changes direction and skew deviation (vertical strabismus) were more sensitive in the diagnosis of stroke than early diffusion magnetic resonance imaging!
In conclusion, the HIT is a simple, practical, inexpensive, and indispensable method for evaluating unilateral or bilateral VOR dysfunctions with 100% specificity in cases of complete vestibular nerve lesion and which should always be used when differentiating between APV and VCA in the emergency room.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
To Péricles Maranhão Neto for his technical support.
Received 13 May 2012
Received in final form 13 May 2012
Accepted 25 May 2012
Conflict of interest: There is no conflict of interest to declare.
Brazilian National Cancer Institute (INCA), Rio de Janeiro RJ, Brazil.
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Correspondence:
Publication Dates
-
Publication in this collection
03 Jan 2013 -
Date of issue
Dec 2012
History
-
Received
13 May 2012 -
Accepted
25 May 2012 -
Reviewed
13 May 2012