| Literature DB >> 21461686 |
Michael Strupp1, Matthew J Thurtell, Aasef G Shaikh, Thomas Brandt, David S Zee, R John Leigh.
Abstract
We review current pharmacological treatments for peripheral and central vestibular disorders, and ocular motor disorders that impair vision, especially pathological nystagmus. The prerequisites for successful pharmacotherapy of vertigo, dizziness, and abnormal eye movements are the "4 D's": correct diagnosis, correct drug, appropriate dosage, and sufficient duration. There are seven groups of drugs (the "7 A's") that can be used: antiemetics; anti-inflammatory, anti-Ménière's, and anti-migrainous medications; anti-depressants, anti-convulsants, and aminopyridines. A recovery from acute vestibular neuritis can be promoted by treatment with oral corticosteroids. Betahistine may reduce the frequency of attacks of Ménière's disease. The aminopyridines constitute a novel treatment approach for downbeat and upbeat nystagmus, as well as episodic ataxia type 2 (EA 2); these drugs may restore normal "pacemaker" activity to the Purkinje cells that govern vestibular and cerebellar nuclei. A limited number of trials indicate that baclofen improves periodic alternating nystagmus, and that gabapentin and memantine improve acquired pendular and infantile (congenital) nystagmus. Preliminary reports suggest suppression of square-wave saccadic intrusions by memantine, and ocular flutter by beta-blockers. Thus, although progress has been made in the treatment of vestibular neuritis, some forms of pathological nystagmus, and EA 2, controlled, masked trials are still needed to evaluate treatments for many vestibular and ocular motor disorders, including betahistine for Ménière's disease, oxcarbazepine for vestibular paroxysmia, or metoprolol for vestibular migraine.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21461686 PMCID: PMC3132281 DOI: 10.1007/s00415-011-5999-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neurol ISSN: 0340-5354 Impact factor: 4.849
Fig. 1Effects of betahistine dihydrochloride [low dosage (filled square, dotted line): 16 or 24 mg tid versus high dosage (filled diamond, solid line): 48 mg tid] on the frequency of attacks of vertigo in 112 Ménière’s disease patients. The mean number of attacks/month (±SEM) during the 3 months preceding treatment (month 0) is indicated, as well as the number/month during therapy (month 3, 6, 9, 12). After 12 months, the mean (median) number of attacks dropped from 7.6 (4.5) to 4.4 (2.0) (p < 0.0001) in the low-dosage group, and from 8.8 (5.5) to 1.0 (0.0) (p < 0.0001) in the high-dosage group. The number of attacks after 12 months was significantly lower in the high-dosage group than in the low-dosage group (p 12M = 0.0002) (from [38])
Frequency of infantile (congenital) and/or acquired ocular oscillations in 4,854 consecutive patients who were seen in a neurological dizziness unit; patients with pure gaze-evoked nystagmus were not included
| Type of nystagmus/ocular oscillation | Number |
|---|---|
| Downbeat nystagmus | 101 |
| Upbeat nystagmus | 54 |
| Central positional nystagmus | 26 |
| Pendular nystagmus | 15 |
| Infantile (congenital) nystagmus | 12 |
| Pure torsional nystagmus | 12 |
| Seesaw nystagmus | 8 |
| Ocular flutter | 8 |
| Square wave jerks | 7 |
| Opsoclonus | 1 |
| Periodic alternating nystagmus | 1 |
Downbeat nystagmus was the most frequent fixation nystagmus (from [58])
Summary of the clinical features, pathophysiology, etiology, site of lesion, and current treatment options for common forms of central nystagmus
| Downbeat nystagmus (DBN) | Upbeat nystagmus (UBN) | Acquired pendular nystagmus (APN) | Periodic alternating nystagmus (PAN) | Infantile (congenital) nystagmus | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Direction of nystagmus (quick phase) | Downward, may be diagonal with lateral gaze | Upward | Mainly horizontal, may have vertical and/or torsional components | Horizontal | Mainly horizontal; may have torsional and small vertical components |
| Waveform (slow phase) | Jerk, constant, increasing, or decreasing slow-phase velocity | Jerk, constant, increasing, or decreasing slow-phase velocity | Pendular, sinusoidal slow-phase | Jerk, mostly constant slow-phase velocity | Accelerating slow-phases; foveation periods when the eye is transiently still |
| Special features | Increased intensity during lateral and downward gaze; sometimes influenced by convergence | Increased intensity during upward gaze; may convert to DBN on convergence | Associated with other oscillations (e.g., palate) and with hypertrophic degeneration of the inferior olive | Changes direction every 90–120 s | Null zone, in which nystagmus is minimal; often suppressed with convergence |
| Sites of lesion | Cerebellum (bilateral floccular hypofunction); rarely lower brainstem lesions | Medial medulla, ponto-mesencephalic junction, rarely cerebellum | Pontomedullary, probably affecting components of neural integrator for gaze holding | Cerebellum (nodulus, uvula) | Uncertain; some cases are associated with afferent visual system anomalies |
| Etiology | Cerebellar tumors, degenerations, Chiari malformations, and stroke; idiopathic; often associated with bilateral vestibulopathy and neuropathy | Brainstem or cerebellar stroke and tumors; Wernicke’s encephalopathy | Multiple sclerosis, oculopalatal tremor due to brainstem or cerebellar stroke involving Guillain-Mollaret triangle | Cerebellar degeneration, cranio-cervical anomalies, multiple sclerosis, cerebellar tumors and stroke | Uncertain; may be associated with afferent visual system anomalies; hereditary in some patients (e.g., FRMD7 mutations) |
| Treatment | 4-Aminopyridine (5–10 mg tid), 3,4-diaminopyridine (10–20 mg tid), baclofen (5 mg tid) clonazepam (0.5 mg tid) | Often transient, treatment often not necessary; baclofen (5–10 mg tid) 4-aminopyridine (5–10 mg tid) | Memantine (10 mg qid) gabapentin (300 mg qid) | Baclofen (5–10 mg tid) | Gabapentin (300 mg qid) memantine (10 mg qid) |
Fig. 2Activation of the flocculus (red) demonstrated, using fMRI, in controls vs patients for the contrast “smooth pursuit in the downward direction” (SMDOWN)—“fixation of a target in the middle of the display” (FIXMID). Results obtained by region of interest group analysis are superimposed onto orthogonal sections (a coronal plane, b sagittal plane, c axial plane) at Montreal Neurological Institute coordinates xyz = −20, −36, −40, through a standard brain template (p < 0.01). d Original recording (search-coil) of vertical pursuit (0.1667 Hz, amplitude ± 18°), which demonstrates relatively normal upward pursuit and impaired downward pursuit in a patient with DBN (from [79])
Fig. 3Spontaneous vertical drift: vertical drift in control subjects and DBN patients due to cerebellar atrophy (DBN I), unknown etiology (DBN II), or other etiologies (DBN III) before (PRE) and after (POST) administration of 4-aminopyridine (4-AP) (gray circles target visible, black squares target blanked). DBN was reduced most in DBN I and to a lesser extent in DBN II following treatment. Similar effects were observed when the target is blanked. Error bars indicate the 95% confidence intervals (from [91])
Fig. 4Examples of the vertical components of acquired pendular nystagmus in association with MS (a–c) and OPT (d–f). Representative records are shown when the patients were taking no treatment for their nystagmus (top panels), memantine 40 mg/day (middle panels), or gabapentin 1,200 mg/day (bottom panels). Compare the lower-amplitude oscillations at one frequency (5.6 Hz) in the patient with MS versus the larger-amplitude oscillations at lower, variable frequencies in the patient with OPT. Both drugs (especially memantine) reduce the amplitude of the oscillations in the MS patient without changing their frequency and also suppress a superimposed upbeat nystagmus. Both drugs (especially gabapentin) reduce the oscillations of OPT, which then show more cycle-to-cycle variation