Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, CT, United States of America.
Department of Radiology and Biomedical Imaging, Yale University School of Medicine, Yale-New Haven Hospital, Yale Cancer Center, New Haven, CT, United States of America.
Am J Otolaryngol. 2019 Nov-Dec;40(6):102263. doi: 10.1016/j.amjoto.2019.07.007. Epub 2019 Jul 8.
To compare imaging utilization between patients presenting to the emergency department (ED) with vertigo and dizziness (VDS) who are diagnosed with stroke and benign paroxysmal positional vertigo (BPPV).
All patients presenting to the ED with VDS (January 2014-June 2018) were identified. Those with a discharge diagnosis of stroke and BPPV were analyzed.
17,884 patients presented to with VDS. 452 were diagnosed with BPPV and 174 with acute stroke. 55.7% of stroke patients had at least one neurologic symptom beyond VDS, 63.8% had a positive neurologic exam, and 80.5% had either; 90.2% had at least one stroke risk factor (RF). 42.0% of BPPV patients received imaging, of which 24.7% had neurologic symptoms beyond VDS, 16.3% had neurologic exam findings, and 34.2% had either (P < 0.001, as compared to stroke). 43 patients (22.6%) lacked neurologic symptoms, exam findings, and stroke RFs; 40 had an adequate HINTS (head impulse, nystagmus, skew) exam. The most common imaging modality received by BPPV patients was plain CT Head (54.2%), followed by CT/CTA (43.7%), and MRI brain (26.3%). CT head was the initial imaging of choice in 44.7% and CT/CTA in 42.6%.
Imaging utilization in BPPV patients presenting with VDS is high. The profile of patients with BPPV that received imaging was substantially more benign than that of stroke patients (a quarter had no neurologic symptoms, exam findings, or stroke RFs). The HINTS exam was underutilized, and computed tomography was heavily utilized despite well-established limitations in diagnosing posterior circulation strokes. This study highlights the need for increased training in the HINTS exam, narrowing of the scope for computed tomography, and a higher threshold for imaging patients with isolated VDS.
比较因眩晕和头晕(VDS)就诊于急诊科(ED)并被诊断为中风和良性阵发性位置性眩晕(BPPV)的患者的影像学利用情况。
确定 2014 年 1 月至 2018 年 6 月期间因 VDS 就诊于 ED 的所有患者。分析具有 BPPV 和急性中风诊断的患者。
17884 例患者因 VDS 就诊。其中 452 例诊断为 BPPV,174 例诊断为急性中风。55.7%的中风患者除 VDS 外至少有一个神经系统症状,63.8%的神经系统检查呈阳性,80.5%的患者至少有一个;90.2%的患者至少有一个中风危险因素(RF)。42.0%的 BPPV 患者接受了影像学检查,其中 24.7%的患者除 VDS 外还有神经系统症状,16.3%的患者有神经系统检查结果,34.2%的患者有神经系统症状或检查结果(P<0.001,与中风患者相比)。43 例(22.6%)患者缺乏神经系统症状、检查结果和中风 RFs;40 例患者 HINTS(头脉冲,眼震,偏斜)检查充分。BPPV 患者最常接受的影像学检查方式是平扫 CT 头(54.2%),其次是 CT/CTA(43.7%)和脑部 MRI(26.3%)。44.7%的患者选择初始影像学检查为 CT 头,42.6%的患者选择 CT/CTA。
因 VDS 就诊的 BPPV 患者的影像学利用情况较高。接受影像学检查的 BPPV 患者的特征明显比中风患者更良性(四分之一的患者没有神经系统症状、检查结果或中风 RFs)。HINTS 检查的使用率较低,尽管 CT 在诊断后循环中风方面存在明显的局限性,但 CT 的使用率仍然很高。本研究强调需要增加对 HINTS 检查的培训,缩小 CT 的范围,并对孤立的 VDS 患者提高影像学检查的门槛。