| Literature DB >> 27083888 |
Marianne Dieterich1,2,3, Mark Obermann4,5, Nese Celebisoy6.
Abstract
Vestibular migraine (VM) is the most common cause of episodic vertigo in adults as well as in children. The diagnostic criteria of the consensus document of the International Bárány Society for Neuro-Otology and the International Headache Society (2012) combine the typical signs and symptoms of migraine with the vestibular symptoms lasting 5 min to 72 h and exclusion criteria. Although VM accounts for 7% of patients seen in dizziness clinics and 9% of patients seen in headache clinics it is still underdiagnosed. This review provides an actual overview on the pathophysiology, the clinical characteristics to establish the diagnosis, the differential diagnosis, and the treatment of VM.Entities:
Keywords: Bárány Society; Dizziness; Episodic vertigo; International Headache Society; Migrainous vertigo; Review; Vestibular migraine
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27083888 PMCID: PMC4833782 DOI: 10.1007/s00415-015-7905-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neurol ISSN: 0340-5354 Impact factor: 4.849
Vestibular migraine diagnostic criteria [8, 9]
| A. At least five episodes fulfilling criteria C and D |
| B. A current or past history of migraine without aura or migraine with aura |
| C. Vestibular symptoms of moderate or severe intensity, lasting 5 min to 72 h |
| D. At least 50 % of episodes are associated with at least one of the following three migrainous features |
| Headache with at least two of the following four characteristics |
| Unilateral location |
| Pulsating quality |
| Moderate or severe intensity |
| Aggravation by routine physical activity |
| Photophobia and phonophobia |
| Visual aura |
| E. Not better accounted for by another ICHD-3 diagnosis or by another vestibular disorder |
Fig. 1To analyze the cerebral blood glucose utilization during an actual VM attack a FDG-PET was performed in a 35-year-old patient suffering from VM according to the consensus criteria [8, 9] (ECAT Exact PET Scanner, Siemens/CTI, Knoxville, USA, with a 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose [FDG]-tracer in a three-dimensional acquisition mode). During the attack the patient presented with a central positional nystagmus beating oblique (up- and leftward) and increasing in different head/body positions (supine, left ear down, right ear down). Both, nystagmus and vertiginous sensation, persisted for 72 h and resolved spontaneously without any ongoing vestibular or ocular motor dysfunction. In addition, a structural T1-weighted MRI (MPRAGE sequence, 180 slices, slice thickness = 1 mm, image matrix = 2562, TR = 9.7 ms, TE = 4 ms) was acquired in a clinical 1.5 T scanner (Siemens Vision, Erlangen, Germany). The PET image was spatially normalised using the structural MRI data and a proportional scaling was performed to adjust for differences in tracer dosage and uptake time. A two-sample t test was computed with respect to a healthy, age-matched reference sample (n = 12) acquired on the same scanner under identical conditions (supine, eyes closed). During the attack the patient showed an increased cerebral glucose metabolism bilaterally in the ventral-anterior thalamus compared to healthy volunteers at rest (p < 0.001 uncorrected). The thalamic response was localized to the prefrontal thalamic projection zone [87]. The scale reflects the z score (personal communication: C. Best, Marburg, and P. zu Eulenburg, Mainz, Germany)