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. 2005 Mar 1;5(2):159–165. doi: 10.7861/clinmedicine.5-2-159

Diagnosis and management of vertigo

GM Halmagyi 1
PMCID: PMC4952869  PMID: 15847010

Abstract

Vertigo is an illusion of rotation due to a disorder of the vestibular system, almost always peripheral. In the history it must be distinguished from pre-syncope, seizures and panic attacks. A single attack of acute, isolated spontaneous vertigo lasting a day or more is due either to vestibular neuritis or cerebellar infarction; distinguishing between the two requires mastery of the head impulse test. Recurrent vertigo is mostly due to benign paroxysmal positioning vertigo (BPPV), Menière's disease or migraine. With a good history, a positional test, an audiogram and a caloric test, it is usually possible to distinguish between these. BPPV is the single most common cause of recurrent vertigo and can usually be cured immediately with a particle repositioning manoeuvre. Posterior circulation ischaemia very rarely causes isolated vertigo attacks and when it does the attacks are brief and frequent and the history is short.

Key Words: benign paroxysmal positioning vertigo (BPPV), cerebellar infarction, labyrinthitis, Menière's disease, migraine, vertigo, vestibular BPV, vestibular neuritis

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