Vestibular System & Bedside Tests - Dizzy Doctor's Drill
Key to balance: Vestibular labyrinth (SCCs, otoliths) detects head motion; VOR stabilizes gaze.

Cardinal Symptoms:
- Vertigo: Sensation of spinning/dizziness.
- Nystagmus: Involuntary rhythmic eye movements.
- Ataxia: Gait imbalance, unsteadiness.
Bedside Clinical Tests:
| Test | Procedure | Positive Finding |
|---|---|---|
| Head Impulse Test (HIT) | Rapid head turn, patient fixates on nose | Corrective saccade (overt/covert) |
| Nystagmus Exam | Observe eyes in primary & eccentric gaze | Direction, type (horizontal, vertical, torsional) |
| Romberg Test | Stand feet together, eyes open then closed | ↑ Sway/fall with eyes closed (sensory ataxia) |
| Dix-Hallpike | Supine, head turned 45°, extended 20° | Latency, torsional nystagmus (BPPV) |
📌 HINTS exam (for acute vestibular syndrome): Head Impulse, Nystagmus type, Test of Skew deviation - helps differentiate stroke from peripheral vestibulopathy (e.g., vestibular neuritis).
VNG/ENG Tests - Eyeing the Imbalance
Videonystagmography (VNG) / Electronystagmography (ENG) objectively assess vestibular and oculomotor function.
-
Oculomotor Tests: Evaluate central neural pathways.
- Saccades: Rapid eye movements to track a target.
- Smooth Pursuit: Following a slowly moving target.
- Optokinetic Nystagmus (OKN): Nystagmus induced by moving visual field.
- Gaze Stability: Maintaining gaze without nystagmus.
Test Key Abnormality Likely Site Saccades Inaccuracy, Slowing Central Smooth Pursuit Low Gain, Jerky Central Optokinetic Asymmetry Central Gaze Stability Gaze-evoked Nystagmus Central/Peripheral -
Positional Testing: Detects Benign Paroxysmal Positional Vertigo (BPPV).
- Dix-Hallpike Test: For posterior canal BPPV.
- Supine Roll Test: For horizontal canal BPPV.
-
Caloric Testing: Assesses horizontal semicircular canal function individually.
- Principle: Thermal stimulation (warm/cold water or air) of ear canal induces endolymphatic flow, causing nystagmus.
- 📌 COWS: Cold water, Opposite beating nystagmus (fast phase); Warm water, Same side beating nystagmus.
- Canal Paresis (CP): $CP = \frac{(RC+RW)-(LC+LW)}{(RC+RW+LC+LW)} \times 100%$. Significant if $> extbf{25}%$.
- Directional Preponderance (DP): $DP = \frac{(RW+LC)-(RC+LW)}{(RC+RW+LC+LW)} \times 100%$. Significant if $> extbf{30}%$.

⭐ Bithermal caloric testing is the cornerstone for identifying side-specific peripheral vestibular weakness.
Advanced Vestibular Tests - Probing Deeper
- Rotational Chair Test:
- Broad-frequency VOR check.
- For: Bilateral vestibular loss.
- Finds: ↓ Gain, phase lead, asymmetry.
- cVEMP (Cervical Vestibular Evoked Myogenic Potential):
- Tests saccule & inf. vestibular nerve (sound/vib → SCM response).
- Finds: ↓ Amplitude, ↑ threshold, asymmetry > extbf{35-40}%.
- oVEMP (Ocular Vestibular Evoked Myogenic Potential):
- Tests utricle & sup. vestibular nerve (sound/vib → EOM response).
- Finds: ↓ Amplitude, ↑ threshold, asymmetry > extbf{35-40}%.
- VEMP Asymmetry Ratio: $AR = \frac{(Amp_{larger} - Amp_{smaller})}{(Amp_{larger} + Amp_{smaller})} \times 100%$
- vHIT (Video Head Impulse Test):
- Assesses indiv. SCC VOR (rapid head turns).
- For: Peripheral hypofunction.
- Finds: ↓ VOR gain < extbf{0.7-0.8}, corrective saccades.

⭐ cVEMP assesses saccular and inferior vestibular nerve function, while oVEMP assesses utricular and superior vestibular nerve function.
| Test | Stimulus | Pathway Tested | Key Findings |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rot. Chair | Rotation | H-SCC, VOR | ↓ Gain, phase lead, asymmetry |
| cVEMP | Sound/Vib. | Saccule, Inf. Vest. N. | ↓ Amp, ↑ Thr, Asymm. > extbf{35-40}% |
| oVEMP | Sound/Vib. | Utricle, Sup. Vest. N. | ↓ Amp, ↑ Thr, Asymm. > extbf{35-40}% |
| vHIT | Head Impulses | Indiv. SCCs, VOR | ↓ Gain < extbf{0.7-0.8}, Saccades |
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- VNG/ENG differentiates central vs. peripheral vestibular lesions; caloric testing (COWS) is a cornerstone.
- Dix-Hallpike maneuver is diagnostic for BPPV; Epley maneuver treats posterior canal BPPV.
- cVEMP assesses saccule & inferior vestibular nerve; oVEMP for utricle & superior vestibular nerve.
- Head Impulse Test (HIT) showing corrective saccades indicates peripheral VOR deficit.
- Gaze-evoked nystagmus, especially direction-changing, points to central pathology.
- Fistula test (Hennebert's sign) suggests perilymphatic fistula or superior canal dehiscence_._
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