vHIT: Introduction & Principle - Reflex Gaze Game
- Video Head Impulse Test (vHIT): An objective bedside test assessing the Vestibulo-Ocular Reflex (VOR).
- Underlying Physiology (VOR):
- Reflex maintaining stable vision during rapid head movements.
- Eyes move opposite to head direction with equal velocity.
- VOR Gain: $Eye Velocity / Head Velocity$; normal is close to 1.
- Purpose of vHIT:
- To assess the function of each of the six semicircular canals (SCCs) individually.
- Identifies peripheral vestibular loss by analyzing VOR at high frequencies (physiological head movements).
⭐ vHIT assesses the function of all six semicircular canals individually at high frequencies, unlike caloric tests which assess only horizontal canals at very low frequencies (0.003 Hz).
vHIT: Procedure & Technique - Head Thrust How-To
- Patient Setup: Seated, fixating on a target. Goggles with high-speed camera track eye movement.
- Head Impulse:
- Small (10-20 degrees), rapid (150-250 deg/s) head turns.
- Unpredictable timing & direction.
- Canal Testing:
- Lateral: Horizontal thrusts (yaw).
- LARP (Left Anterior, Right Posterior):
- Turn head ~30° Right.
- Pitch: Down for LA, Up for RP.
- RALP (Right Anterior, Left Posterior):
- Turn head ~30° Left.
- Pitch: Down for RA, Up for LP.
- 📌 Mnemonic: Head turn opposite to Anterior canal tested (e.g., Right turn for Left Anterior).
⭐ Head impulses must be unpredictable, rapid, and of small amplitude to accurately assess VOR.

vHIT: Interpretation of Results - Reading the Ripples
-
Normal Vestibulo-Ocular Reflex (VOR) Gain:
- Lateral canals: $≈1.0$ (typically $>0.8$).
- Vertical canals: typically $>0.7$.
-
Catch-up Saccades: Indicate vestibular hypofunction in the tested canal.
- Overt: Visible, occur after head movement.
- Covert: Not visible (subclinical), occur during head movement.
⭐ Covert saccades are generated during head movement and are not visible to the naked eye, while overt saccades occur after head movement stops and are visible.
-
Key Findings & Interpretation:
Feature Normal vHIT Abnormal vHIT (Canal Hypofunction) VOR Gain Lateral $>0.8$
Vertical $>0.7$↓ (Lateral <0.8, Vertical <0.7) for tested canal Saccades Absent Present (Overt and/or Covert) Implication Intact canal function Hypofunction of the specific canal tested

vHIT: Clinical Applications - Diagnostic Edge
- Differentiates: Peripheral (e.g., vestibular neuritis) vs. Central (e.g., stroke) lesions; core of HINTS exam.
- Diagnoses: Unilateral & bilateral vestibulopathy.
- Assesses:
- Vestibular neuritis: ↓ VOR gain in affected canal(s).
- Meniere's disease: Variable; may be normal or show canal dysfunction.
- Superior Canal Dehiscence (SCD): Often normal vHIT.
- 📌 HINTS: Head Impulse, Nystagmus, Test of Skew. ⭐ > In acute vestibular syndrome, a normal vHIT (negative Impulse) with direction-changing nystagmus or skew deviation strongly suggests a central cause (e.g., stroke).
vHIT vs. Caloric Test
| Feature | vHIT | Caloric Test |
|---|---|---|
| Canals | All 6 SCCs | Lateral SCC primarily |
| Frequency | Physiological (>1 Hz) | Low (~$0.003$ Hz) |
| Comfort | Good, quick | Poor (nausea) |

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- vHIT assesses Vestibulo-Ocular Reflex (VOR) for all six semicircular canals (SCCs).
- Measures VOR gain (normal ≈ 1); ↓ gain indicates SCC hypofunction.
- Detects covert & overt catch-up saccades, signs of peripheral vestibular loss.
- Crucial in HINTS exam (Head Impulse, Nystagmus, Test of Skew) for differentiating stroke from vestibular neuritis.
- Tests high-frequency VOR, complementing low-frequency caloric tests.
- Pinpoints specific affected canal(s) and side of lesion.
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