Dizziness Flashcards
need to work out if it is vertigo or dizzy?
what is true vertigo?
when is it non-vertigo?
True vertigo is the sensation that the environment is spinning around, hallucination of movement. The floor may tilt, sink or rise.
- Faint: feel clammy, start to feel sick
- Or Light headedness
- Or: Unsteady (cerebellar/mechanical.
Most common causes of dizziness in primary care settings is (these all present with vertigo)?
1) BPPV
2) Meniere’s Disease,
3) Acute Vestibular Neuronitis (Acute labyrinthitis
how long does BPPV last?
character of attack?
how is it precipitated?
Dx?
<30 seconds
sudden onset of severe vertigo with repeated attacks over weeks and months
sudden/specific head movements (looking up/bending down
- normal neurological examination
- positive Dix-Hallpike test
Meniere’s Disease
how long do the vertigo attacks last?
features?
Tx?
recurrent attacks of vertigo lasting >20mins
- Tinnutis, sense of aural fullness +/- falling to one side.
- Tx: bed rest and reassurance in acute attacks, antihistamine if prolonged (cinnarizine).
Acute Labyrinthitis (Vestibular neuronitis)
length of attacks?
features?
Tx?
- Abrupt onset of severe vertigo, nausea, vomiting. - Severe vertigo subsides in days, full recovery in 3-4 weeks.
- No deafness or tinnitus.
- Tx: Reassure.
Tinnitus
- what drugs can cause it ?
- cause?
- Tx?
Aspirin (reversible ) and loop diuretics
inner ear damage and hearing loss, wax, excess noise, Meniere’s disease, otitis media.
Psychological support is important – reassure that tinnitus doesn’t mean madness. Cognitive therapy helps, masking may give relief (white noise
Drugs don’t really help – misoprostol appears to help