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David Johnson Staff Specialist, Emergency Medicine

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1 David Johnson Staff Specialist, Emergency Medicine
Dizziness David Johnson Staff Specialist, Emergency Medicine

2 Dizziness Need to decide is this Vertigo Lightheadedness/presyncope
Central Peripheral Lightheadedness/presyncope Sepsis Drugs Cardiac Anxiety

3 Vertigo History Sensation of motion 1/3 of cases unable to determine
Room spinning Patient spinning “swimming” or “floating” 1/3 of cases unable to determine

4 Peripheral vs central Peripheral Central Sudden onset
Nystagmus – horizontal or rotatory, fixed direction Fast towards affected ear Hearing loss Nausea, diaphoresis Positive head impulse Negative skew Slower onset – mostly Less nystagmus. May be vertical Does not fatigue Persists with fixation Usually other neuro signs or headache Often impaired balance Negative head impulse Positive skew

5 BPPV Most common cause of vertigo
Very sudden onset, often after being supine Vertigo on head turning, not when head is still Duration of vertigo <1 min for each episode If this is not the story, do not make the diagnosis

6 Other peripheral causes
Viral labyrinthitis Constant +/- viral infection +/- hearing loss Meniere’s Tinnitus/aural fullness Acoustic neuroma Suppurative labyrinthitis

7 Central causes Cerebellar stroke Brainstem stroke Drug toxicity
Lateral Medullary Syndrome

8 Physical exam Full neurological exam Cerebellar signs
Ears, Weber/Rinne HINTS exam Head impulse Nystagmus Test of skew

9 HINTS Exam

10 Investigations MRI CT has sensitivity approx 16% for posterior fossa disease If you are worried get an MRI. If you are not worried do no imaging.


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