Application of the Video Head Impulse Test to Detect Vertical Semicircular Canal Dysfunction
10018 Ophthalmology Clinic
Eye Movements
Video Recording
610 Medicine & health
Fixation, Ocular
Vestibular Function Tests
Functional Laterality
Semicircular Canals
10040 Clinic for Neurology
2809 Sensory Systems
03 medical and health sciences
2733 Otorhinolaryngology
2728 Neurology (clinical)
0302 clinical medicine
Vestibular Diseases
Data Interpretation, Statistical
Physical Stimulation
Humans
Head
Head Impulse Test
DOI:
10.1097/mao.0b013e31828d676d
Publication Date:
2013-05-25T11:59:34Z
AUTHORS (5)
ABSTRACT
The video head impulse test (vHIT) is a useful clinical tool to detect semicircular canal dysfunction. However, so far, vHIT has been limited to measurement of the function of the horizontal semicircular canals. The goal of this study was to determine if vHIT can detect vertical semicircular canal dysfunction.Horizontal and vertical eye movements were recorded in response to abrupt, passive, unpredictable head turns (head impulses) in the planes of the vertical semicircular canals by high-speed video (250-Hz sampling rate) together with measures of the head movement. Head impulses were delivered diagonally in the plane of the vertical semicircular canals, whereas gaze was directed along the same plane. Patients with known vestibular loss as shown by previous scleral search coil recording were tested to identify if the vHIT testing could detect the loss.The results of patients with unilateral, bilateral, and individual semicircular canal dysfunction were compared with the results of a healthy control subject. The patient with bilateral vestibular loss had no compensatory slow eye movements in any direction. The patient with unilateral vestibular loss showed reduced response for head impulses activating the canals in their affected right ear (right anterior, right posterior, and right horizontal head impulses). The patient with isolated canal loss showed reduced response for head impulses activating the affected right posterior canal.vHIT detects peripheral deficits of both vertical and horizontal semicircular canal function and is a new tool for measuring dysfunction of individual semicircular canals in vestibular patients.
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