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Cheatography

Benign Paraoxysmal Positional Vertigo (BPPV) Cheat Sheet (DRAFT) by

Presentation, Management etc

This is a draft cheat sheet. It is a work in progress and is not finished yet.

BPPV

- Vertigo - sensation of swaying, tilting, spinning or feeling unbalanced
- Vertigo can be benign or sinister
- Displa­cement of calcium carbonate crystals in the semici­rcular canals
- The crystals settle in the endolymph
- No stimulus causing hair cells to fire
- displaced crystals shift with the fluid
Stimulus is unbalanced with respect to opposite ear
- This causes symptoms of dizzin­ess­/sp­inn­ing­/sw­aying

Demogr­aphics

- Can occur at any age, but common at the 4th and 5th decade
- Incidence increases over time because of the degene­rative changes in the otolithic membrane (elderly can have falls)
- Slightly more common in females
- Affects right labryrinth more commonly

Risk Factors

- Sedentary lifestyle
- Nutrit­ional defici­encies
- Hyperi­nsu­linemia
- Hyperg­lycemia

Ear Anatomy

- Filled with endolymph , endolymph bends cilia , movement of these cilia sends signals to brain
- Transmits to eyes and cervical propri­oce­ptors
- Superior semici­rcular canal detects nodding movement
- Horizontal semici­rcular - right and left head rotation
- Posterior semici­rcular - Movement in coronal plane(lat flexion of head)

Causes

- Usually idiopathic (calcium carbonate particles dislodge and migrate into semici­rcular canals)
- Cranial Trauma
- Prior otological surgery
- Infection
- Vestibular neuritis
- Middle ear disease
- Menieres
- Ovarian hormonal dysfun­ction
- Ototox­icity
- Endoly­mphatic hydrops
- Syphilis
- Psycho­logical disorders
- Vestibular system degene­ration
- Metabolic disorders
- CV disease
- Vertob­rob­asilar insuff­iciency
- Vertebral artery stenosis and tortuosity

Presen­tation

- Sudden episodes of rotatory vertigo
- Usually lasts 10-20 seconds after head position change
- Usually occurs during moving from upright to lying down. rolling from side to side in bed, bending forward, moving head to look up and downor side to side
- Usually occurs with increased anxiety, impaired postural control, reduced quality of life
- Rule out more sinister causes of vertig­o/d­izz­iness
- Pinpoint site of involved canal (multiple can be involved and it can occur bilate­rally)
- Most cases affect posterior semici­rcular canal
- +ve Dixhal­lpike ( for posterior reprod­uction of dizziness, nausea, and or upbeating rotary nystagmus (pupils move counte­rcl­ockwise in right labryrinth lesions and clockwise in left) - Downward facing ear one being tested
- +ve supine roll test (for horizontal canal)
- Anterior canal is rare due to it's upright orient­ation (debris likely to fall out)

Imaging

- MRI and CT/Not BPPV if:
Negative Dix-ha­llpike or supine roll
Abnormal cranial exam findings
Nystagmus (Vertical, torsional, direct­ion­-ch­anging, non-fa­tigable - central cause)
Continuous symptoms
Head trauma
Vertigo occurs without changing head positions
Loss of concio­usness
Frequent unexpl­ained falls
Recent viral infection
Hearing loss
Tinnitus
Ear fullness
Earache
Ptosis
Facial­/ex­tremity paraes­thesia
Visual distur­bances
Difficulty swalli­ng/­spe­aking
Ataxia
medica­tions (anti-­hyp­ert­ens­ive­/an­ti-­dep­res­sants)
- This is to rule out other pathol­ogies

DDx

- Cervic­ogenic vertigo (similar to BPPV, patient complains of floati­ng/­lig­hth­ead­nes­s/u­nst­ead­iness, presents with loss of Cx ROM, Cx restri­ctions and tenderness +ve neck torsion test - stimulates cx propri­oce­ptors)
- Concussion (Trauma)
- Intrac­ranial Bleed (UMNL)
- CNS ischem­ia/­str­oke­/VBAI ( Gait, Ataxia, Rhomberg, coordi­nat­ion­other symptoms, Cranial nerves, blood pressure)
- Neoplasm (Lymph­nodes, systemic signs)
- Infection (Tempe­rature, Otoscopic exam, Lymph nodes)
- Intrac­ranial swelling
- Migraine
- Carotid sinus syndrome (Auscu­ltation of carotid)
- Intoxi­cation
- Menieres
- Perily­mphatic fistula
- Vestibular system degene­ration
- CV disease (Heart and Respir­atory exam)
- Drug toxicity
- Cerebe­llo­pontine angle neoplasm
- Brainstem enceph­alitis

Management

- Canalith reposi­tioning and home exercises for approp­riate semici­rcular canal
- If posterior, Epley maneuver or Foster Half somersault
- If horizonal canal, Lempert 360 roll maneuver (BBQ roll)
- If anterior, Epley/­reverse epley
- Inform patients that they might feel dizzy, attempt to keep their eyes open as much as possible (look at my nose)
- Inform patients to sleep with the affected side up and reaccu­rance rates (10 and 80% - delay between symptom and management leads to higher occurance rates) and safety
- If CNS/ba­lance disorders - additional home support to reduce risk of falling
- Home exercises: Brandt­-Daroff exercises, Foster half somers­ault, Eye tracking
- Contra­ind­ica­tions: Acute Cx F#/ins­tab­ility, recent cx spine surgery, perilymph fistula, Detached retina, Unstable carotid artery diseas­e/s­ten­osis, Verteb­rob­asilar insuff­ciency, Stroke­/TIA, Unstable Heart disease, Severe neck disease (Cervical spondy­losis +myelo­pathy, Advanced RA
- Cx SMT
- Antihi­sta­mines (Mecli­zine) suppress labryrinth excita­bility and vestib­ula­r-end organ receptors
- Anti-e­metics (ondan­setron, metocl­opr­amide, promet­haz­ine­/pr­och­lor­per­azine)

Prognosis

- Most pts find relief within 4-6 weeks
- Recurrence rates 5-25%
- Risk of recurr­ence: Females, older patients, psychi­atric