4.7 Article

Paradigm shift in acute dizziness: is caloric testing obsolete?

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROLOGY
Volume 269, Issue 2, Pages 853-860

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s00415-021-10667-7

Keywords

Caloric testing; Head-impulse test; Neuritis; Acute stroke; Vertigo; Dizziness

Funding

  1. Universitat Bern
  2. Swiss National Science Foundation [320030_173081]

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The study aimed to compare the diagnostic accuracy of Caloric Testing and video head impulse test (vHIT) in differentiating between vestibular neuritis and vestibular strokes in acute dizziness. The results showed that Caloric Testing was less accurate than vHIT in discriminating between the two conditions.
Objective: Cold and warm water ear irrigation, also known as bithermal caloric testing, has been considered for over 100 years the 'Gold Standard' for the detection of peripheral vestibular hypofunction. Its discovery was awarded a Nobel Prize. We aimed to investigate the diagnostic accuracy of Caloric Testing when compared to the video head impulse test (vHIT) in differentiating between vestibular neuritis and vestibular strokes in acute dizziness. Design: Prospective cross-sectional study (convenience sample). Setting: All patients presenting with signs of an acute vestibular syndrome at the emergency department of a tertiary referral center. Participants: One thousand, six hundred seventy-seven patients were screened between February 2015 and May 2020 for Acute Vestibular Syndrome (AVS), of which 152 met the inclusion criteria and were enrolled. Inclusion criteria consisted of a state of continuous dizziness, associated with nausea or vomiting, head-motion intolerance, new gait or balance disturbance and nystagmus. Patients were excluded if they were younger than 18 years, if symptoms lasted < 24 h or if the index ED visit was > 72 h after symptom onset. Of the 152 included patients 85 completed testing. We assessed 58 vestibular neuritis and 27 stroke patients. Main outcome measures: All patients underwent calorics and vHIT followed by a delayed MRI which served as a gold standard for vestibular stroke confirmation. Results: The overall sensitivity and specificity for detecting stroke with a caloric asymmetry cut-off of 30.9% was 75% and 86.8%, respectively [negative likelihood ratio (NLR) 0.29] compared to 91.7% and 88.7% for vHIT (NLR 0.094). Best VOR gain cut-off was 0.685. Twenty-five percent of vestibular strokes were misclassified by calorics, 8% by vHIT. Conclusions: Caloric testing proved to be less accurate than vHIT in discriminating stroke from vestibular neuritis in acute dizziness. Contrary to classic teaching, asymmetric caloric responses can also occur with vestibular strokes and might put the patient at risk for misdiagnosis. We, therefore, recommend to abandon caloric testing in current practice and to replace it with vHIT in the acute setting. Caloric testing has still its place as a diagnostic tool in an outpatient setting.

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