| Literature DB >> 31892175 |
Sung Kyun Kim1, Sung Won Li1, Seok Min Hong1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Persistent geotropic direction-changing positional nystagmus (DCPN) has the characteristics of cupulopathy, but its underlying pathogenesis is not known. We investigated the relationship of the results of the head roll test, bow and lean test, and side of the null plane between persistent and transient geotropic DCPN to determine the lesion side of persistent geotropic DCPN and understand its mechanism.Entities:
Keywords: direction-changing positional nystagmus; head roll test; mechanism; null plane
Year: 2019 PMID: 31892175 PMCID: PMC7019752 DOI: 10.3390/jcm9010073
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.241
Demographic findings between persistent and transient geotropic DCPN (direction-changing positional nystagmus).
| Persistent DCPN, | Transient DCPN, | |
|---|---|---|
| Age, y, mean age SD (range) | 54.1 ± 13.4 (38−77) | 49.6 ± 14.7(10−76) |
| Sex ratio: men/women ( | 8:17 | 10:31 |
| lesion side ( | 7:17 † | 13:28 |
* side of stronger nystagmus in head roll test. † non-localized lesion side in one patient.
Result of bow and lean test (BLT) and null plane between persistent and transient geotropic DCPN (direction-changing positional nystagmus).
| Persistent DCPN | Transient DCPN | |
|---|---|---|
| BLT (%) * | 21/25 (84.0) | 19/41 (46.3%) |
| BN (+), LN (+) | 21 | 17 |
| Opposite side | 21 | 17 |
| Same side | 0 | 0 |
| BN(−), LN(+) | 0 | 2 |
BN = bowing nystagmus; LN = leaning nystagmus, * p < 0.05.
Analysis of bow and lean test (BLT), head roll test (HRT) and the side of null plane between persistent and transient geotropic DCPN (direction-changing positional nystagmus).
| Persistent DCPN, | Transient DCPN, | |
|---|---|---|
| HRT: Null plane (%) | 4/25 (16.0) | - |
| BLT: Null plane (%) | 20/21 (95.2) | - |
| BLT: HRT (%) * | 7/21 (33.3) | 14/19 (73.7) |
HRT: Null plane = case in which the direction of strong nystagmus in head roll test and the side of null plane during head roll in supine position are the same, BLT: Null plane = case in which the direction of bowing nystagmus in bow and lean test and the side of null plane during head roll in supine position are the same, BLT: HRT = case in which the direction of bowing nystagmus in bow and lean test and the direction of stronger nystagmus in head roll test are the same. * p < 0.05.
Figure 1Theoretical findings of the position of the cupula according to the head rotation angle during the head roll test in left persistent direction-changing positional nystagmus. The large and small arrows indicate the lesion side and direction of cupula movement, respectively. The left horizontal canal and cupula viewed from the front. A0 (supine position) cupula medial to lateral position. A1 (null plane) rotated 20–30° to the left (lesion side). Cupula parallel to the vertical axis. A2 (head turning to the left, lesion side) rotated an additional 40–50°. Cupula 40–50° downward from the vertical axis. A3 (head turning to the right, opposite side of the lesion) Cupula 90–100° to the vertical axis.
Figure 2Left horizontal canal and cupula in the supine position (viewed from the front). θ: Angle between the cupula and perpendicular line.
Figure 3Theoretical findings of the anatomical direction of the cupula (from lateral to medial) during the head roll test in left persistent direction-changing positional nystagmus. The large and small arrows indicate the lesion side and direction of cupula movement, respectively. The left horizontal canal and cupula viewed from the front. A0 (supine position) cupula lateral to medial position. A1 (null plane) rotated 20–30° to the right (opposite side of the lesion). Cupula parallel to the vertical axis A2 (head turning to the right, opposite side of the lesion) rotated an additional 40–50°. Cupula 40–50° downward from the vertical axis. A3 (head turning to the left, lesion side) Cupula 90–100° to the vertical axis.