4.6 Article

Case Report: Bow Hunter Syndrome-One Reason to Add Non-gravity Dependent Positional Nystagmus Testing to Your Clinical Neuro-Otologic Exam

Journal

FRONTIERS IN NEUROLOGY
Volume 12, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2021.814998

Keywords

positional nystagmus; positional vertigo; Bow Hunter's syndrome; neurological examination; downbeat nystagmus

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This case study highlights the importance of non-gravity dependent position testing in diagnosing transient downbeat nystagmus with vertigo. Despite delays in surgery due to suicidal ideation, vertigo symptoms were eventually resolved through a C4-5 anterior cervical dissection and fusion.
This case study describes transient downbeat nystagmus with vertigo due to a bilateral Bow Hunters Syndrome that was initially treated for 7 months as a peripheral benign paroxysmal positional vertigo. Normal static angiography and imaging studies (magnetic resonance, computed tomography) contributed to the mis-diagnosis. However, not until positional testing with the patient in upright (non-gravity dependent) was a transient downbeat nystagmus revealed with vertigo. The patient was referred for neurosurgical consult. Unfortunately, surgery was delayed due to suicidal ideation and hospitalization. Eventually, vertigo symptoms resolved following a C4-5 anterior cervical dissection and fusion. This case highlights the critical inclusion of non-gravity dependent position testing as an augment to the positional testing component of the clinical examination as well as the extreme duress that prolonged positional vertigo can cause.

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