Weber Konrad P, MacDougall Hamish G, Halmagyi G Michael, Curthoys Ian S
Department of Neurology, Royal Prince Alfred Hospital, Sydney, Australia.
Ann N Y Acad Sci. 2009 May;1164:486-91. doi: 10.1111/j.1749-6632.2008.03730.x.
The head impulse test (HIT) is a safe, quick way of assessing horizontal semicircular-canal function in patients with peripheral vestibular loss. At the bedside, the clinician identifies "overt" catch-up saccades back to the target after brisk passive head rotation as an indirect sign of canal paresis. However, saccades during head rotation ("covert" saccades) may not be detectable by the naked eye, and so lead to incorrect diagnosis. Up to now, the scleral search coil technique has been the standard for HIT measurement, but that technique is not practical for routine diagnostic use. A new lightweight, nonslip, high-speed video-oculography system (vHIT) that measures eye velocity during horizontal head impulses has been developed. This system is easy to use in a clinical setting, provides an objective measure of the vestibulo-ocular reflex (VOR), and detects both overt and covert catch-up saccades in patients with vestibular loss.
头部脉冲试验(HIT)是评估外周性前庭功能丧失患者水平半规管功能的一种安全、快速的方法。在床边,临床医生将快速被动头部旋转后回到目标的“明显”追赶性扫视识别为半规管麻痹的间接征象。然而,头部旋转过程中的扫视(“隐蔽”扫视)可能无法用肉眼检测到,从而导致错误诊断。到目前为止,巩膜搜索线圈技术一直是HIT测量的标准方法,但该技术不适合常规诊断使用。一种新的轻便、防滑、高速视频眼动图系统(vHIT)已被开发出来,该系统可测量水平头部脉冲期间的眼速度。该系统在临床环境中易于使用,可提供前庭眼反射(VOR)的客观测量,并能检测前庭功能丧失患者的明显和隐蔽追赶性扫视。