Vestibular Neuritis

On this page

Definition & Pathophysiology - Nerve Gone Wild

  • Definition: Acute, prolonged vertigo (hours-days) with nausea, vomiting, and gait imbalance. Crucially: no hearing loss or other neurological signs.
    • Caused by unilateral vestibular hypofunction.
  • Pathophysiology:
    • Inflammation of the vestibular nerve (CN VIII), often viral (HSV-1 reactivation suspected) or post-viral.
    • Typically affects the superior division of the vestibular nerve.
      • Innervates: Utricle, Superior & Horizontal Semicircular Canals (SCCs).
    • This leads to a sudden ↓ in tonic neural input from the affected side, creating an imbalance in vestibular signals to the brainstem.

    ⭐ Vestibular neuritis is characterized by acute vestibular syndrome (vertigo, nystagmus, head motion intolerance) without cochlear involvement, distinguishing it from labyrinthitis.

Clinical Features - Dizzy Patient Tales

  • Sudden, severe, persistent vertigo: Acute onset, lasts hours to days; often bedridden.
  • Intense nausea & vomiting: Frequently accompanies vertigo.
  • Gait instability & imbalance: Difficulty walking, veers/falls towards affected side.
  • Symptoms aggravated by head movements.
  • Spontaneous nystagmus:
    • Horizontal or horizontal-torsional.
    • Unidirectional: fast phase beats away from affected side.
    • Suppressed by visual fixation (Alexander's Law).
  • Positive Head Impulse Test (HIT): Corrective saccade when head turned rapidly to affected side.
  • No auditory symptoms: Hearing preserved (no hearing loss/tinnitus).
  • No other neurological deficits: (e.g., weakness, dysarthria).
  • Often preceded by viral URI.

⭐ Hallmark: Acute vertigo without auditory or other neurological symptoms, distinguishing from labyrinthitis or stroke.

Diagnosis & DDx - HINTS to Diagnosis

  • HINTS Exam (Head Impulse, Nystagmus, Test of Skew): Key for differentiating peripheral (e.g., Vestibular Neuritis) vs. central (e.g., stroke) causes in Acute Vestibular Syndrome (AVS).

    • HI (Head Impulse): Abnormal (corrective saccade present) suggests Peripheral. Normal HI is a Central concern.
    • N (Nystagmus): Unidirectional, horizontal, fast-phase away from lesion suggests Peripheral. Direction-changing (gaze-evoked), vertical, or pure torsional nystagmus is a Central concern.
    • TS (Test of Skew): Absent suggests Peripheral. Present (vertical ocular misalignment) is a Central concern.
  • 📌 HINTS to INFARCT Mnemonic for central (stroke) signs:

    • Impulse Normal (Normal Head Impulse)
    • Fast-phase Alternating Nystagmus (Direction-Changing)
    • Refixation on Cover Test (Skew deviation present)

    ⭐ Any single "INFARCT" sign is highly sensitive for stroke. A benign HINTS profile (Abnormal HI, Unidirectional Nystagmus, No Skew) strongly points to a peripheral cause like vestibular neuritis.

  • Key DDx:
    • Stroke (Posterior circulation) - Critical to exclude!
    • Labyrinthitis (vertigo + acute hearing loss)
    • Meniere's disease (episodic vertigo, hearing loss, tinnitus, aural fullness)
    • BPPV (brief, positional vertigo, no hearing loss)
    • Migrainous vertigo (headache, photophobia, phonophobia may be present)
    • Multiple Sclerosis

Management - Stop The Spin!

Error generating content for this concept group: Failed to process successful response

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Characterized by sudden, severe vertigo, nausea, and vomiting, lasting days.
  • Crucially, no auditory symptoms like hearing loss or tinnitus are present.
  • Typically due to viral inflammation of the vestibular nerve (superior part often).
  • Leads to unilateral peripheral vestibular hypofunction.
  • Positive Head Impulse Test (HIT) is a key diagnostic sign.
  • Spontaneous, unidirectional, horizontal nystagmus beating away from the affected side.
  • Management includes corticosteroids (early), antiemetics, and vestibular rehabilitation exercises.

Practice Questions: Vestibular Neuritis

Test your understanding with these related questions

Down-beat nystagmus is seen in lesion of ?

1 of 5

Flashcards: Vestibular Neuritis

1/9

What is the classical triad of Meniere's disease?_____

TAP TO REVEAL ANSWER

What is the classical triad of Meniere's disease?_____

Episodic vertigo, fluctuating hearing loss and tinnitus

browseSpaceflip

Enjoying this lesson?

Get full access to all lessons, practice questions, and more.

Start Your Free Trial