From the, Department of Undergraduate Medicine, Northern Ontario School of Medicine, Sudbury, Ontario, Canada.
the, Department of Critical Care, Department of Anesthesia, Northern Ontario School of Medicine, Sudbury, Ontario, Canada.
Acad Emerg Med. 2021 Apr;28(4):387-393. doi: 10.1111/acem.14171. Epub 2020 Dec 4.
The HINTS exam is a series of bedside ocular motor tests designed to distinguish between central and peripheral causes of dizziness in patients with continuous dizziness, nystagmus, and gait unsteadiness. Previous studies, where the HINTS exam was performed by trained specialists, have shown excellent diagnostic accuracy. Our objective was to assess the diagnostic accuracy of the HINTS exam as performed by emergency physicians on patients presenting to the emergency department (ED) with a primary complaint of vertigo or dizziness.
A retrospective cohort study was performed using data from patients who presented to a tertiary care ED between September 2014 and March 2018 with a primary complaint of vertigo or dizziness. Patient characteristics of those who received the HINTS exam were assessed along with sensitivity and specificity of the test to rule out a central cause of stroke.
A total of 2,309 patients met criteria for inclusion in the study. Physician uptake of the HINTS exam was high, with 450 (19.5%) dizzy patients receiving all or part of the HINTS. A large majority of patients (96.9%) did not meet criteria for receiving the test as described in validation studies; most often this was because patients lacked documentation of nystagmus or described their symptoms as intermittent. In addition, many patients received both HINTS and Dix-Hallpike exams, which are intended for use in mutually exclusive patient populations. In no case was dizziness due to a central cause identified using the HINTS exam.
Our results suggest that despite widespread use of the HINTS exam in our ED, its diagnostic value in that setting was limited. The test was frequently used in patients who did not meet criteria to receive the HINTS exam (i.e., continuous vertigo, nystagmus, and unsteady gait). Additional training of emergency physicians may be required to improve test sensitivity and specificity.
HINTS 检查是一系列床边眼球运动测试,旨在区分持续性头晕、眼球震颤和步态不稳的患者的头晕的中枢和外周原因。先前的研究表明,经过专门培训的专家进行 HINTS 检查具有出色的诊断准确性。我们的目的是评估急诊医生对因眩晕或头晕为主诉就诊于急诊部的患者进行 HINTS 检查的诊断准确性。
我们使用了 2014 年 9 月至 2018 年 3 月期间因眩晕或头晕为主诉就诊于三级护理急诊部的患者的数据,进行了一项回顾性队列研究。评估接受 HINTS 检查患者的特征,并评估该检查排除中风中枢原因的敏感性和特异性。
共有 2309 例患者符合纳入本研究的标准。HINTS 检查的医生接受率很高,有 450 例(19.5%)头晕患者接受了全部或部分 HINTS 检查。绝大多数患者(96.9%)不符合验证研究中描述的接受检查的标准;最常见的原因是患者缺乏眼球震颤的记录或描述他们的症状为间歇性。此外,许多患者接受了 HINTS 和 Dix-Hallpike 检查,这两种检查旨在用于互斥的患者人群。在任何情况下,均未通过 HINTS 检查确定头晕是由中枢原因引起的。
我们的结果表明,尽管 HINTS 检查在我们的急诊部广泛使用,但在该环境中的诊断价值有限。该检查在不符合接受 HINTS 检查标准的患者中经常使用(即持续性眩晕、眼球震颤和步态不稳)。可能需要对急诊医生进行额外的培训,以提高检查的敏感性和特异性。