Sun-Uk Lee, Tark Kim, Eek-Sung; Eeksung Lee
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引用次数: 3

摘要

2019冠状病毒病(COVID-19)患者经常出现头晕和不稳定,即使在主要症状恢复后也是如此。1,2先前的研究是基于患者的自我报告,因此这些症状的确切机制尚不确定。我们报告了一例提示双侧前庭病变(BVP)是COVID-19后头晕和不稳定的原因,并提出病毒感染是急性并发BVP的病因。一名患有COVID-19的43岁男性也出现眩晕,被转介到神经科。患者有高血压、终末期肾病(ESRD)和充血性心力衰竭史。10天前,他在持续发烧和吞咽困难后,通过实时逆转录聚合酶链反应诊断为COVID-19。患者否认有头晕/不稳定、头痛、耳胀或听力损失史。发病2天后眩晕消失,但仍感觉不稳,特别是在黑暗中或站在不平整的地板上时。患者于1周前因颈静脉置管后右耳后疼痛转介至我科。当时他没有眩晕或不稳的症状,Romberg试验呈阴性,没有辅助也能串联行走。神经学检查显示双侧膝盖抽搐减少。无肢体共济失调、其他运动和感觉异常以及自发性眼球震颤伴或不伴视固定。眼球震颤不是由水平摇头、振动刺激或体位动作引起的。头部脉冲测试在两个方向上都是阳性的。使用水灌溉的双热热试验显示双耳的响应降低(由冷热刺激引起的总慢相速度为11.8°/s)(图1A)。在刺激任何一只耳朵时,颈和眼前庭诱发的肌生成电位降低(图1B)。纯音测听无明显差异(图1C),水平和垂直扫视和平滑追踪正常,前庭眼反射视觉消除也正常。脑干和小脑的弥漫性和敏感性加权图像以及液体衰减反转恢复图像的结果无显著性。根据上述观察,根据Bárány协会2017年诊断标准确定BVP的诊断。3患者在发烧1个月后出院,并指示在家进行前庭康复治疗。在5个月后进行的电话采访中,患者报告行走时无头晕、眩晕或不稳。众所周知,COVID-19不仅优先侵袭呼吸系统,而且还会累及神经系统,包括脑神经由于第八脑神经受累,也可表现为听力受损或头晕在COVID-19期间可出现前庭神经炎6,患者可表现为孤立的急性前庭综合征,无典型的植物性症状,如发烧、咳嗽或肌痛我们的患者在COVID-19期间出现了BVP。BVP通常表现为进行性或顺序性累及单侧前庭病变,数月至数年后继发对侧前庭病变。然而,我们的病人却同时表现出李善旭,达克,金周成
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Acute Bilateral Vestibulopathy Associated With COVID-19
Dear Editor, Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) patients often experience dizziness and unsteadiness, even after recovering from the main symptoms.1,2 Previous studies were based on patient self-reporting, and hence the exact mechanism of these symptoms is uncertain. We report a case suggestive of bilateral vestibulopathy (BVP) as a cause of dizziness and unsteadiness after COVID-19, and propose virus infection as an etiology of acute simultaneous BVP. A 43-year-old male with COVID-19 who was also experiencing vertigo was referred to the neurology department. The patient had a history of hypertension, end-stage renal disease (ESRD), and congestive heart failure. He had been diagnosed with COVID-19 by realtime reverse-transcription polymerase chain reaction 10 days previously after persistent fever and dysgeusia. The patient denied a history of dizziness/unsteadiness, headache, ear fullness, or hearing loss. His vertigo disappeared 2 days after onset, but he still felt unsteady, particularly in the dark or when standing on an uneven floor. The patient had been referred to our department 1 week previously for right posterior auricular pain after jugular vein catheterization. At that time he did not complain of vertigo or unsteadiness, the Romberg test was negative, and tandem gait was possible without assistance. Neurological examination showed diminished bilateral knee jerks. Limb ataxia and other motor and sensory abnormalities as well as spontaneous nystagmus with or without visual fixation were absent. Nystagmus was not induced by horizontal head-shaking, vibratory stimuli, or positional maneuvers. Head-impulse tests were positive in both directions. Bithermal caloric tests using water irrigation revealed reduced responses in both ears (11.8°/s of summated slow-phase velocities induced by warm and cold stimulation) (Fig. 1A). Cervical and ocular vestibular-evoked myogenic potentials were decreased during stimulation of either ear (Fig. 1B). Pure-tone audiometry was unremarkable (Fig. 1C), and horizontal and vertical saccades and smooth pursuit were normal, as was visual cancellation of the vestibulo-ocular reflex. Findings on diffusionand susceptibility-weighted images, as well as fluid-attenuated inversion-recovery images of the brainstem and cerebellum were unremarkable. Based on these observations, a diagnosis of BVP was established according to the 2017 diagnostic criteria of the Bárány Society.3 The patient was discharged 1 month after fever onset and instructed to undergo vestibular rehabilitation at home. In a telephone interview conducted 5 months later, the patient reported no dizziness, vertigo, or unsteadiness while walking. COVID-19 is known not only for its preferential respiratory invasion, but also for nervous system involvement, including the cranial nerves.4 It can also manifest as hearing impairment or dizziness due to involvement of the eighth cranial nerve.5 Vestibular neuritis can develop during the course of COVID-19,6 and patients can present with isolated acute vestibular syndrome without typical vegetative symptoms such as fever, cough, or myalgia.7 Our patient presented with BVP during the course of COVID-19. BVP typically manifests as the progressive or sequential involvement of unilateral vestibulopathy followed by contralateral vestibulopathy at months to years later. However, our patient exhibited the simultaneSun-Uk Lee Tark Kim Eek-Sung Lee
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