| Literature DB >> 28473800 |
Nora K Macdonald1, Diego Kaski2, Yougan Saman1, Amal Al-Shaikh Sulaiman2,3, Amal Anwer2, Doris-Eva Bamiou1,2.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To provide a systematic review of the clinical and radiological features of lesion-induced central positional nystagmus (CPN) and identify salient characteristics that differentiate central from peripheral positional nystagmus (PN).Entities:
Keywords: central positional nystagmus; central positional vertigo; nystagmus; positional nystagmus; positional vertigo; vertigo
Year: 2017 PMID: 28473800 PMCID: PMC5397512 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2017.00141
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.003
Typical clinical features of peripheral BPPV and central PPV [Adapted from Ref. (.
| Features | BPPV | Central PPV |
|---|---|---|
| Latency following precipitating positioning manoeuver | 1–5 s (shorter in h-BPPV depending on acceleration of head turn and cupulolithiasis) | 0–5 s |
| Duration of nystagmus | 5–60 s (longer in cupulolithiasis) | 5 to >60 s |
| Direction of nystagmus | During stimulation in the plane of the affected canal; torsional/vertical for p-BPPV and a-BPPV; horizontal for h-BPPV | Pure vertical; pure torsional, not attributable to the stimulated canal plane |
| Fatiguability | Typical for pc-BPPV and a-BPPV, rare in h-BPPV | Possible |
| Course of nystagmus and vertigo in an attack | Crescendo–decrescendo typical, not common in h-BPPV | Crescendo–decrescendo possible |
| Vertigo | Typical | Typical, with exceptions |
| Nausea and vomiting | Rare on single precipitating maneuvers (associated with intense nystagmus, not uncommon after several maneuvers) | Frequent on single precipitating maneuvers (not necessarily) associated with strong nystagmus intensity |
| Natural course of the condition | Spontaneous recovery within several weeks in 70–80% | Spontaneous recovery rare |
| Associated neurological signs and symptoms | None | Often cerebellar and brainstem oculomotor signs |
| Brain imaging | Normal | Lesions of the dorsal vermis and/or dorsolateral to the fourth ventricle |
| Repositioning therapy | Positional nystagmus disappears after appropriate positional therapy | Refractory to repositioning therapy |
BPPV, benign paroxysmal positioning vertigo/nystagmus; PPV, paroxysmal positioning vertigo/nystagmus; a, anterior; h, horizontal; p, posterior canal.
Participants, intervention, comparison, outcomes, and study designs criteria for inclusion.
| Patient population | Adult (+18 years) |
| Presenting with PN and/or vertigo confirmed as central in origin | |
| Any setting | |
| Intervention | Intervention must include positional testing as a means of observing the PN |
| Comparison | Not applicable |
| Outcome | The clinical presentation of the PN must be reported in terms of at least one of the following characteristics: direction, provoking position, duration, and latency |
| Study design | Published work from all study designs |
| Date | No limitation |
| Language | English, French, German |
| Publication type | Must be peer-reviewed |
Figure 1Flow chart of the study identification, eligibility, and inclusion process.
Figure 2Anatomical areas affected in patients with central positional nystagmus based on imaging and autopsy data.
Frequency of the typical indicators of central positional nystagmus.
| Criterion | Frequency (%) | Instances reported |
|---|---|---|
| The direction is not attributable to the stimulated canal plane | 72.2 | 97 |
| Pure vertical nystagmus | 31.3 | 144 |
| Pure torsional nystagmus | 2.1 | 144 |
| Direction-reversing nystagmus while the position is maintained | 3.7 | 82 |
| Enhancement with fixation or reduced ocular fixation index | 91.7 | 12 |
| It persists for at least 1 min or as long as the precipitating head position is maintained | 40.7 | 81 |
| Commences with no latency or within 3 s of assuming the provoking positon | 94.7 | 38 |
| Does not fatigue with repetitive positioning | 82.1 | 28 |
| Additional oculomotor abnormalities | 58.6 | 70 |
| Additional brainstem or cerebellar symptoms and/or abnormalities | 48.8 | 82 |
| PN does not resolve with repeated repositioning maneuvers | 100 | 16 |
| Prominent nausea or vomiting on positioning | 83.3 | 18 |
| Prominent vertigo on positioning | 94.5 | 55 |