Read Rosen & Barkin's 5-Minute Emergency Medicine Consult Online

Authors: Jeffrey J. Schaider,Adam Z. Barkin,Roger M. Barkin,Philip Shayne,Richard E. Wolfe,Stephen R. Hayden,Peter Rosen

Tags: #Medical, #Emergency Medicine

Rosen & Barkin's 5-Minute Emergency Medicine Consult (768 page)

BOOK: Rosen & Barkin's 5-Minute Emergency Medicine Consult
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ETIOLOGY
Peripheral
  • Acute peripheral vestibulopathy (APV):
    • Vestibular neuritis (most common):
      • Single acute attack continuous rotational vertigo
      • Constant for several days
      • Present even when still
      • No hearing deficits
      • Highest incidence in 3rd–5th decade
    • Acute labyrinthitis:
      • Similar to vestibular neuritis but:
        • Associated with hearing deficit
        • May be viral (common), serous, acute suppurative, toxic, or chronic
  • Benign paroxysmal positional vertigo (BPPV):
    • Most common cause recurrent vertigo
    • Posterior canal, 85–95% of BPPV cases
    • Lateral semicircular less common
    • Probable cause is loose particles (otoliths) in semicircular canals
    • Can be secondary to other entities including trauma and APV
  • Ototoxic drugs:
    • Aminoglycosides
    • Antimalarials
    • Erythromycin
    • Furosemide
  • Ménière disease:
    • Episodic vertigo, hearing loss, and tinnitus
  • Acoustic neuroma:
    • Tumor of Schwann cells enveloping the 8th cranial nerve (CN VIII)
    • Develops into central cause
    • Progressive unilateral hearing deficits and tinnitus
    • May also involve CN V, VII, or X
  • Trauma:
    • Rupture of tympanic membrane, round window, labyrinthine concussion, or development of perilymphatic fistula can all have severe symptoms.
  • Otitis media and serous otitis with effusion
  • Foreign body in ear canal
Central
  • Vertebrobasilar artery insufficiency:
    • Disturbances may be transient or exacerbated by movement of the neck.
  • Cerebellar infarction
  • Cerebellar hemorrhage:
    • Neurosurgical emergency
    • Sudden onset of headache, vertigo, vomiting, and ataxia
    • Visual paralysis to affected side
    • Ipsilateral CN VI paralysis
  • Multiple sclerosis:
    • Onset between 20–40 yr
    • All forms of nystagmus
    • May have abrupt onset of severe vertigo and vomiting
    • History of other vague and varying neurologic signs or symptoms
  • Brainstem hypertensive encephalopathy
  • Trauma:
    • Vertiginous symptoms common after whiplash injury
    • Postconcussive syndrome or damage to labyrinth or CN VIII secondary to basilar skull fracture
    • Vertebral artery injury has been seen after chiropractic manipulation.
  • Temporal lobe epilepsy:
    • Associated with hallucinations, aphasia, trancelike states, or convulsions
    • More common in younger patients
  • Vertebrobasilar migraines:
    • Prodrome of vertigo, dysarthria, ataxia, visual disturbances, or paresthesias followed by headache
    • Often a family history of migraines or similar attacks
  • Tumor
  • Subclavian steal syndrome:
    • Exercise of an arm causing shunting of blood from vertebral and basilar arteries into the subclavian artery, resulting in vertigo or syncope
    • Secondary to a stenotic subclavian artery
    • Diminished unilateral radial pulse or differential systolic BP between arms
  • Hypoglycemia
DIAGNOSIS
SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS

Sensation of motion, spinning, disorientation in space, or disequilibrium

History
  • Does true vertigo exist?
  • Timing of onset:
    • Gradual (hours–days): Probably neuritis
    • Sudden and fixed symptoms (seconds–minutes) consider stroke (but see BPPV below)
    • Multiple prodromal episodes in months, especially weeks prior (TIAs): Stroke more likely
    • Repeated intense episodes provoked/exacerbated by head movements: BPPV more likely but could be TIA
    • Episodic attacks with auditory symptoms: Consider Ménière
  • Stroke risk factors including age >50 and vascular risks
  • Severity of symptoms: Imbalance out of proportion to vertigo, consider stroke
  • Modifiers: Head movement, BPPV more likely
  • Associated symptoms:
    • Hearing loss (new unilateral): Labyrinthitis, Ménière (with tinnitus), rarely, but possibly stroke
    • Neurologic symptoms (central cause):
      • Unilateral limb weakness
      • Dysarthria
      • Headache
      • Ataxia
      • Numbness of the face
      • Hemiparesis, headache
      • Diplopia/visual disturbances
    • Has there been head or neck trauma?
  • Past medical history/ROS:
    • Stroke risk factors
  • Medication history
Physical-Exam
  • Extraocular movements:
    • Nystagmus (direction defined by fast component)
    • Unilateral, horizontal, some rotational component in (unilateral) APV, worse with gaze in the direction of nystagmus (fast away from lesion, linear slow phase)
    • Worse with occlusive ophthalmoscopy (cover 1 eye, examine optic disc with ophthalmoscope): APV more likely
    • Bilateral direction suggests central etiology, as does pure vertical or torsional nystagmus. If direction changes with gaze, central cause.
  • Head impulse test (HIT) for unilateral vestibular loss (smartphone with slow motion video app promising aide for such testing):
    • Face patient, grasp head with both hands
    • Patient to look at your nose (or camera)
    • Rapidly rotate head 10–20° then back to midline:
      • Normal: Maintains gaze
      • Abnormal: Lag in maintaining gaze and corrective saccade back to nose/camera
    • Rotation to left, tests left vestibular apparatus
  • Skew deviation testing (predicts central pathology):
    • Face patient
    • Patient to look at your nose
    • Alternately cover each eye
    • Normal: Eyes motionless
    • Abnormal: Refixation saccade after uncovered, (refixation upward, ipsilateral medullary stroke, refixation downward, contralateral stroke)
  • Dix–Hallpike test for posterior canal BPPV
  • Supine Roll test for lateral canal BPPV
  • Auscultation of the carotid and vertebral arteries for bruits
  • Pulses and pressures in both arms
  • Inspection of the ears:
    • Evaluation of hearing (Weber and Rinne tests)
    • Ocular assessment (pupils, fundi, visual acuity, nystagmus)
  • Cardiac auscultation
  • Full neurologic exam, common stroke findings:
    • Unilateral limb weakness
    • Gait ataxia
    • Unilateral limb ataxia and/or sensory deficit
    • Dysarthria
ESSENTIAL WORKUP
  • Ask patient to describe the sensation without using the word “dizzy.”
  • Determine whether the cause is a peripheral or a central process using patient’s clinical presentation (see above).
DIAGNOSIS TESTS & NTERPRETATION
Lab

Electrolytes, BUN, creatinine, glucose

Imaging
  • EKG for any suspicion of cardiac etiology
  • Head CT/MRI for evaluation of suspected tumor, or post-traumatic cause
  • MRI/MRA for suspected vertebrobasilar insufficiency (CT poor sensitivity)
Diagnostic Procedures/Surgery

Audiology or electronystagmography often helpful in outpatient follow-up

DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS

More likely other cause when “dizziness” actually is lightheadedness or malaise:

  • DM
  • Hypothyroidism
  • Drugs (e.g., alcohol, barbiturates, salicylates)
  • Hyperventilation
  • Cardiac (i.e., arrhythmia, MI, or other etiologies of syncope); peripheral vascular disease (i.e., HTN, orthostatic hypotension, vasovagal)
  • Infection/sepsis
TREATMENT
PRE HOSPITAL

Treatment and medication per EMS protocol based on symptoms

INITIAL STABILIZATION/THERAPY
  • IV access for dehydration/vomiting
  • Monitor
  • Trauma evaluations as indicated
  • Finger-stick blood glucose
ED TREATMENT/PROCEDURES
  • Based on accurate diagnosis:
    • Central etiologies require more aggressive workup than peripheral.
    • Neurosurgical intervention for cerebellar bleed
    • Symptomatic treatment for peripheral vertigo with appropriate follow-up
  • Administer medication to control vertiginous symptoms and/or nausea:
    • Antihistamines
    • Benzodiazepines
    • Antiemetics
  • Initiate IV antibiotics for acute bacterial labyrinthitis (rare).
  • Repositioning maneuvers such as Epley and Semont for posterior BPPV. Roll or Lempert maneuver for lateral BPPV
MEDICATION
  • Diazepam (Valium): 2.5–5 mg IV q8h or 2–10 mg PO q8h
  • Dimenhydrinate (Dramamine): 25–50 mg IV, IM or PO q6h
  • Diphenhydramine (Benadryl): 25–50 mg IV, IM, or PO q6h
  • Lorazepam (Ativan): 1 mg IV, IM or 1–2 mg PO q4–6h
  • Meclizine (Antivert): 25 mg PO q6h PRN
  • Promethazine (Phenergan): 12.5 mg IV q6h or 25–50 mg IM, PO, or PR q6h
FOLLOW-UP
DISPOSITION
Admission Criteria
BOOK: Rosen & Barkin's 5-Minute Emergency Medicine Consult
12.42Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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