Longridge N S, Mallinson A I
Neuro-otology Unit, Vancouver General Hospital, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.
Otol Neurotol. 2005 Jul;26(4):691-4. doi: 10.1097/01.mao.0000169637.71064.c6.
To define and investigate the symptom set known as visual-vestibular mismatch and analyze its nature and occurrence in two groups of patients referred for dizziness.
Prospective study of two groups of sequentially referred patients complaining of dizziness, imbalance, or both.
A tertiary and quaternary care ambulatory referral center.
Two groups of patients were studied. One was a group of patients who had suffered work-related head trauma and had subsequent complaints of dizziness and/or imbalance. The other was a group of patients referred for dizziness and/or imbalance who had no history of head trauma, work-related injury, or litigation procedures.
Standard vestibular assessment including computerized dynamic posturography was carried out on all patients. A series of questions was designed to quantify patients' complaints of symptoms of visual-vestibular mismatch, and patients were scored according to their yes/no answers to the five questions.
Results of traditional vestibular tests were correlated with the answers to the questions. Computerized dynamic posturography and electronystagmography results were compared between both symptomatic and nonsymptomatic patients and also between patients who had traumatic and nontraumatic causes of their symptoms.
We found no correlation between test results and the presence of visual-vestibular mismatch symptomatology. There does seem to be a connection between the presence of motion sickness symptomatology and the development of visual-vestibular mismatch symptoms.
Although visual-vestibular mismatch is of vestibular origin, it is discernible only after obtaining a careful history. It is a genuine symptom set of vestibular origin, and there is a certain group of patients who are more sensitive to this symptom set and who are often debilitated by its presence.
定义并研究被称为视觉 - 前庭不匹配的症状群,并分析其性质以及在两组因头晕前来就诊的患者中的发生情况。
对两组依次转诊的主诉头晕、失衡或两者皆有的患者进行前瞻性研究。
一家三级和四级医疗门诊转诊中心。
对两组患者进行了研究。一组是曾遭受与工作相关的头部创伤且随后主诉头晕和/或失衡的患者。另一组是因头晕和/或失衡前来就诊且无头部创伤、工作相关损伤或诉讼程序史的患者。
对所有患者进行包括计算机化动态姿势描记法在内的标准前庭评估。设计了一系列问题以量化患者对视觉 - 前庭不匹配症状的主诉,并根据患者对五个问题的是/否回答进行评分。
将传统前庭测试结果与问题答案进行关联。比较有症状和无症状患者之间以及症状由创伤性和非创伤性原因引起的患者之间的计算机化动态姿势描记法和眼震电图结果。
我们发现测试结果与视觉 - 前庭不匹配症状学的存在之间无相关性。晕动病症状学的存在与视觉 - 前庭不匹配症状的发展之间似乎确实存在联系。
尽管视觉 - 前庭不匹配起源于前庭,但只有在仔细询问病史后才能识别。它是一组真正起源于前庭的症状,并且有特定的一组患者对这一症状群更为敏感,且常因它的存在而衰弱。