Horizontal semicircular canal jam: Two new cases and possible mechanisms

03 medical and health sciences 0302 clinical medicine Otorhinolaryngology RF1-547 RD1-811 OTOLOGY, NEUROTOLOGY, AND NEUROSCIENCE Surgery 3. Good health
DOI: 10.1002/lio2.352 Publication Date: 2020-01-16T16:11:19Z
ABSTRACT
AbstractIntroductionBenign paroxysmal positional vertigo (BPPV) of the horizontal semicircular canal (hSCC) can present with otoconia blocking its lumen (canalith jam), with signs and symptoms that make it difficult to distinguish from central nervous system pathology.ObjectiveHere we report two cases of canalith jam affecting the hSCC and offer a theoretical mechanism based on known vestibular neurophysiology.MethodsWe use video‐oculography to document the canalith jam and show the moment the otoconia loosen.ResultsCanalith jam is a rare form of BPPV remedied with repositioning maneuvers.ConclusionClinicians should consider canalith jam as a mechanism for BPPV when the nystagmus is (a) Direction fixed with fixation removed and during positional testing; (b) Velocity dependent on supine head position; (c) Converts to geotropic directional changing nystagmus.
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