Vestibular Neuritis (Neuronitis)
Some sources consider vestibular neuritis and labyrinthitis to be the same thing (some differentiate based on auditory symptoms)
Background
- Benign, self-limited disorder associated with complete recovery in most patients
- Must distinguish from acute vascular lesions of the CNS
- Pathophysiology
- May be viral or postviral inflammatory disorder affecting vestibular portion of CN VIII
- May differentiate from labyrinthitis which technically should have hearing loss
Clinical Features
- Acute, rapid onset of severe vertigo with nausea/vomiting and gait instability
- Nystagmus
- Unilateral, horizontal or horizontal-torsional that is suppressed with visual fixation
- Does not change direction with gaze
- Unlike BPPV and Meniere lasts several days and does not recur
Differential Diagnosis
- Cerebellum lesion
- Brainstem infarction
- Usually associated with other symptoms of Wallenberg syndrome (lateral medulla infarct)
- Ipsilateral Horner's, loss of corneal reflex, dysphagia, contralateral loss of pain/temp
- Usually associated with other symptoms of Wallenberg syndrome (lateral medulla infarct)
Vertigo
- Vestibular/otologic
- Benign Paroxysmal Positional Vertigo (BPPV)
- Traumatic (following head injury)
- Infection
- Meniere's disease
- Ear foreign body
- Otic barotrauma
- Neurologic
- Cerebellar stroke
- Vertebrobasilar insufficiency
- Lateral Wallenberg syndrome
- Anterior inferior cerebellar artery syndrome
- Neoplastic: cerebellopontine angle tumors
- Basal ganglion diseases
- Vertebral Artery Dissection
- Multiple sclerosis
- Infections: neurosyphilis, tuberculosis
- Epilepsy
- Migraine (basilar)
- Other
- Hematologic: anemia, polycythemia, hyperviscosity syndrome
- Toxic
- Chronic renal failure
- Metabolic
Evaluation
- See vertigo
Management
- Treat associated vertigo symptomatically
Disposition
See Also
References
This article is issued from
Wikem.
The text is licensed under Creative
Commons - Attribution - Sharealike.
Additional terms may apply for the media files.