Horizontal head impulse test detects gentamicin vestibulotoxicity

Adult Male Protein Synthesis Inhibitors Eye Movements Point-of-Care Systems Reflex, Vestibulo-Ocular Middle Aged Vestibular Function Tests Semicircular Canals 03 medical and health sciences Ocular Motility Disorders 0302 clinical medicine Vestibular Diseases Oculomotor Muscles Predictive Value of Tests Head Movements Neural Pathways Saccades Humans Female Gentamicins Aged
DOI: 10.1212/wnl.0b013e3181a18652 Publication Date: 2009-04-20T20:26:38Z
ABSTRACT
Parenteral antibiotic therapy with gentamicin, even in accepted therapeutic doses, can occasionally cause bilateral vestibular loss (BVL) due to hair cell toxicity.To quantify in patients with gentamicin vestibulotoxicity (GVT) the extent of acceleration gain deficit of the horizontal vestibulo-ocular reflex at different accelerations with a graded head impulse test (HIT) in comparison with standard caloric and rotational testing. To characterize the corresponding HIT catch-up saccade pattern to provide the basis for its salience to clinicians.Horizontal HIT of graded acceleration (750 degrees-6,000 degrees/sec2) was measured with binocular dual search coils in 14 patients with GVT and compared with 14 normal subjects and a control subject with total surgical BVL.Patients showed mostly symmetric HIT gain deficits with a continuous spectrum from almost normal to complete BVL. Gain deficits were present even at the lowest head accelerations. HIT gain correlated better with caloric (Spearman rho = 0.85, p = 0.0001) than rotational testing (rho = 0.55, p = 0.046). Cumulative amplitude of overt saccades after head impulses was 5.6 times larger in patients than in normal subjects. Compared with previously published patients after unilateral vestibular deafferentation, GVT patients with BVL generated only approximately half the percentage of covert saccades during head rotation (23% at 750 degrees/sec2 to 46% at 6,000 degrees/sec2).Head impulse testing is useful for early bedside detection of gentamicin vestibulotoxicity because most patients, even those with partial bilateral vestibular loss (BVL), have large overt saccades. Covert saccades, which can conceal the extent of BVL, are only approximately half as frequent as in unilateral patients, but may be present even in total BVL.
SUPPLEMENTAL MATERIAL
Coming soon ....
REFERENCES (39)
CITATIONS (95)
EXTERNAL LINKS
PlumX Metrics
RECOMMENDATIONS
FAIR ASSESSMENT
Coming soon ....
JUPYTER LAB
Coming soon ....