Doijiri Ryosuke, Uno Hisakazu, Miyashita Kotaro, Ihara Masafumi, Nagatsuka Kazuyuki
Division of Neurology, Department of Stroke and Cerebrovascular Diseases, National Cerebral and Cardiovascular Center, Suita, Osaka, Japan; Department of Neurology, Iwate Prefectural Central Hospital, Morioka, Iwate, Japan.
Division of Neurology, Department of Stroke and Cerebrovascular Diseases, National Cerebral and Cardiovascular Center, Suita, Osaka, Japan.
J Stroke Cerebrovasc Dis. 2016 Oct;25(10):2549-52. doi: 10.1016/j.jstrokecerebrovasdis.2016.06.038. Epub 2016 Aug 2.
The sudden development of vertigo or dizziness without focal neurological symptoms is generally attributable to vestibular diseases such as benign paroxysmal positional vertigo. Isolated vertigo or dizziness attack needs more attention than vestibular diseases. This retrospective study was performed to elucidate the frequency of strokes in patients with isolated vertigo or dizziness attack.
We enrolled 221 patients (men, 119; women, 102; mean age, 68.4 ± 10.3 years) who were admitted to our hospital over the last 10 years because of sudden isolated vertigo or dizziness attack without other neurological symptoms except for nystagmus, deafness, or tinnitus. We investigated the clinical features, final diagnosis, neuroimaging findings, and short- or long-term outcome of these patients.
One hundred eighteen patients had vertigo whereas the other 103 had dizziness. Brain computed tomography or magnetic resonance imaging revealed recent stroke lesions in 25 patients (11.3%) (ischemic, 21; hemorrhagic, 4).The lesions were generally small and localized in the cerebellum (n = 21), pons (n = 1), medulla oblongata (n = 1), or corona radiata (n = 1). Of the 25 patients, 19 (76%) had dizzy-type spells; none had neurological dysfunction at the time of discharge. In the remaining 196 patients, no stroke was detected on computed tomography or magnetic resonance imaging.
Stroke was found in 11% of patients with isolated vertigo or dizziness attack. The posterior inferior cerebellar artery area was the most frequently implicated for isolated vertigo or dizziness.
突然出现眩晕或头晕且无局灶性神经症状通常归因于前庭疾病,如良性阵发性位置性眩晕。孤立性眩晕或头晕发作比前庭疾病需要更多关注。本回顾性研究旨在阐明孤立性眩晕或头晕发作患者中风的发生率。
我们纳入了221例患者(男性119例,女性102例;平均年龄68.4±10.3岁),这些患者在过去10年因突然出现孤立性眩晕或头晕发作而入住我院,除眼球震颤、耳聋或耳鸣外无其他神经症状。我们调查了这些患者的临床特征、最终诊断、神经影像学表现以及短期或长期预后。
118例患者有眩晕,另外103例有头晕。脑部计算机断层扫描或磁共振成像显示25例患者(11.3%)有近期中风病灶(缺血性21例,出血性4例)。病灶一般较小,位于小脑(n = 21)、脑桥(n = 1)、延髓(n = 1)或放射冠(n = 1)。在这25例患者中,19例(76%)有头晕型发作;出院时均无神经功能障碍。在其余196例患者中,计算机断层扫描或磁共振成像未发现中风。
在孤立性眩晕或头晕发作的患者中,11%发现有中风。小脑后下动脉区域是孤立性眩晕或头晕最常涉及的部位。