Aging with Cerebral Small Vessel Disease and Dizziness: The Importance of Undiagnosed Peripheral Vestibular Disorders
Recent studies showed a link between cerebral small vessel white matter disease (SVD) and dizziness: patients whose dizziness cannot be explained by vestibular disease show severe SVD and gait abnormalities; however, little is still known about how SVD can cause this symptom. The primary aim of this...
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doaj-26c0634d174c4e9dae11ca30c91491122020-11-24T21:39:16ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Neurology1664-22952017-06-01810.3389/fneur.2017.00241270578Aging with Cerebral Small Vessel Disease and Dizziness: The Importance of Undiagnosed Peripheral Vestibular DisordersNiccolò Cerchiai0Michelangelo Mancuso1Elena Navari2Nicola Giannini3Augusto Pietro Casani4Department of Medical and Surgical Pathology, Otorhinolaryngology Section, Pisa University, Pisa, ItalyDepartment of Experimental and Clinical Medicine, Neurological Institute, Pisa University, Pisa, ItalyDepartment of Medical and Surgical Pathology, Otorhinolaryngology Section, Pisa University, Pisa, ItalyDepartment of Experimental and Clinical Medicine, Neurological Institute, Pisa University, Pisa, ItalyDepartment of Medical and Surgical Pathology, Otorhinolaryngology Section, Pisa University, Pisa, ItalyRecent studies showed a link between cerebral small vessel white matter disease (SVD) and dizziness: patients whose dizziness cannot be explained by vestibular disease show severe SVD and gait abnormalities; however, little is still known about how SVD can cause this symptom. The primary aim of this study is to examine the possible underlying causes of dizziness in neurovascular patients; this is in order to assess whether treatable causes could be routinely disregarded. A secondary aim is to possibly define a central oculomotor pattern induced per se by SVD. This could help the diagnosis of SVD-related dizziness. In this single-blind prospective study, 60 patients referred to a neurovascular clinic because of dizziness and SVD on imaging were divided into an L-SVD and a H-SVD group (low and high SVD burden, respectively), and then blindly examined with vestibulometric tests. In H-SVD group, the percentage of unexplained dizziness reached 82.8%. There was a higher prevalence of peripheral vestibular abnormalities in the L-SVD patient group (51.6%) than in the H-SVD (17.2%; p = 0.012). We found no differences in central oculomotor findings between the two groups. Although oculomotricity does not show any consistent pattern, a severe SVD can directly represent a cause of dizziness. However, a patient with mild SVD is more likely to suffer by a peripheral vestibular disorder. Therefore, given the high incidence of vestibular disease in neurovascular or geriatric clinics, clinicians should be cautious when ascribing dizziness solely to the presence of SVD as easily treatable peripheral vestibular causes may be missed.http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fneur.2017.00241/fullvertigodizzinessleukoaraiosisvestibular lossbenign paroxysmal vertigowhite matter hyperintensities |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Niccolò Cerchiai Michelangelo Mancuso Elena Navari Nicola Giannini Augusto Pietro Casani |
spellingShingle |
Niccolò Cerchiai Michelangelo Mancuso Elena Navari Nicola Giannini Augusto Pietro Casani Aging with Cerebral Small Vessel Disease and Dizziness: The Importance of Undiagnosed Peripheral Vestibular Disorders Frontiers in Neurology vertigo dizziness leukoaraiosis vestibular loss benign paroxysmal vertigo white matter hyperintensities |
author_facet |
Niccolò Cerchiai Michelangelo Mancuso Elena Navari Nicola Giannini Augusto Pietro Casani |
author_sort |
Niccolò Cerchiai |
title |
Aging with Cerebral Small Vessel Disease and Dizziness: The Importance of Undiagnosed Peripheral Vestibular Disorders |
title_short |
Aging with Cerebral Small Vessel Disease and Dizziness: The Importance of Undiagnosed Peripheral Vestibular Disorders |
title_full |
Aging with Cerebral Small Vessel Disease and Dizziness: The Importance of Undiagnosed Peripheral Vestibular Disorders |
title_fullStr |
Aging with Cerebral Small Vessel Disease and Dizziness: The Importance of Undiagnosed Peripheral Vestibular Disorders |
title_full_unstemmed |
Aging with Cerebral Small Vessel Disease and Dizziness: The Importance of Undiagnosed Peripheral Vestibular Disorders |
title_sort |
aging with cerebral small vessel disease and dizziness: the importance of undiagnosed peripheral vestibular disorders |
publisher |
Frontiers Media S.A. |
series |
Frontiers in Neurology |
issn |
1664-2295 |
publishDate |
2017-06-01 |
description |
Recent studies showed a link between cerebral small vessel white matter disease (SVD) and dizziness: patients whose dizziness cannot be explained by vestibular disease show severe SVD and gait abnormalities; however, little is still known about how SVD can cause this symptom. The primary aim of this study is to examine the possible underlying causes of dizziness in neurovascular patients; this is in order to assess whether treatable causes could be routinely disregarded. A secondary aim is to possibly define a central oculomotor pattern induced per se by SVD. This could help the diagnosis of SVD-related dizziness. In this single-blind prospective study, 60 patients referred to a neurovascular clinic because of dizziness and SVD on imaging were divided into an L-SVD and a H-SVD group (low and high SVD burden, respectively), and then blindly examined with vestibulometric tests. In H-SVD group, the percentage of unexplained dizziness reached 82.8%. There was a higher prevalence of peripheral vestibular abnormalities in the L-SVD patient group (51.6%) than in the H-SVD (17.2%; p = 0.012). We found no differences in central oculomotor findings between the two groups. Although oculomotricity does not show any consistent pattern, a severe SVD can directly represent a cause of dizziness. However, a patient with mild SVD is more likely to suffer by a peripheral vestibular disorder. Therefore, given the high incidence of vestibular disease in neurovascular or geriatric clinics, clinicians should be cautious when ascribing dizziness solely to the presence of SVD as easily treatable peripheral vestibular causes may be missed. |
topic |
vertigo dizziness leukoaraiosis vestibular loss benign paroxysmal vertigo white matter hyperintensities |
url |
http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fneur.2017.00241/full |
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