G Dumas, I S Curthoys, A Baguant, P Perrin, S Schmerber
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Skull Vibration Induced afternystagmus: A new clinical indicator of superior canal dehiscence.
Vibrations applied to the cranium induce, in 55%-92% of patients with CT-verified superior canal dehiscence (SCD), a perstimulatory nystagmus most often ipsilaterally beating when the vertex location is stimulated at 100Hz. The skull vibration-induced nystagmus (SVIN) test is a bone-conducted (BC) Tullio phenomenon in patients with a 3rd mobile window syndrome (TMWS). Here, we describe the technical cues and procedures to obtain an afternystagmus regularly observed in 55% of a series of 43 patients with SCD chosen as examples and stimulated at 100Hz and higher frequencies by bone-conducted vibrations (BCV). Only 6% of 32 patients with total unilateral vestibular loss (TUVL) show this afternystagmus with a very small slow phase velocity. The SVIN afternystagmus is characterized by a persistent nystagmus with a slow decay after stimulation withdrawal and is associated with dizziness. This distinctive sign in SCD is usually not observed in TUVL patients but only in some other TMWS. Its production likely relies on a cupula deflection secondary to endolymph flow and stimulation of regular discharging neurons by the BCV in SCD but not TUVL patients. It is a simple, specific, robust sign of SCD and TMWS, and its sensitivity is comparable to air-conducted Tullio phenomenon and other compressional tests.
期刊介绍:
European Annals of Oto-rhino-laryngology, Head and Neck diseases heir of one of the oldest otorhinolaryngology journals in Europe is the official organ of the French Society of Otorhinolaryngology (SFORL) and the the International Francophone Society of Otorhinolaryngology (SIFORL). Today six annual issues provide original peer reviewed clinical and research articles, epidemiological studies, new methodological clinical approaches and review articles giving most up-to-date insights in all areas of otology, laryngology rhinology, head and neck surgery. The European Annals also publish the SFORL guidelines and recommendations.The journal is a unique two-armed publication: the European Annals (ANORL) is an English language well referenced online journal (e-only) whereas the Annales Françaises d’ORL (AFORL), mail-order paper and online edition in French language are aimed at the French-speaking community. French language teams must submit their articles in French to the AFORL site.
Federating journal in its field, the European Annals has an Editorial board of experts with international reputation that allow to make an important contribution to communication on new research data and clinical practice by publishing high-quality articles.