4.7 Article

Usability of the head impulse test in routine clinical practice in the emergency department to differentiate vestibular neuritis from stroke

期刊

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROLOGY
卷 28, 期 5, 页码 1737-1744

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/ene.14707

关键词

dizziness; HINTS; stroke; vertigo; vestibulopathy

资金

  1. German Research Foundation (Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft) [MA5332/3-1]

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The bedside head impulse test (bHIT) has low accuracy when applied by nonexperts in routine practice, with high sensitivity for vestibular neuritis (VN) but low specificity due to many false-abnormal results in posterior circulation stroke (PCS). Video-oculography-supported head impulse test (vHIT) showed excellent specificity and moderate sensitivity. Decision on patient care was arbitrary and independent from bHIT results, with a significant number of patients admitted to the stroke unit regardless of diagnosis.
Background and purpose The bedside head impulse test (bHIT) is used to differentiate vestibular neuritis (VN) from posterior circulation stroke (PCS) in patients presenting with acute vestibular syndrome (AVS). If assessed by neuro-otological experts, diagnostic accuracy is high. We report on its diagnostic accuracy when applied by nonexperts during routine clinical practice in the emergency department (ED), its impact on patient management, and the potential diagnostic yield of the video-oculography-supported head impulse test (vHIT). Methods Medical chart review of 38 AVS patients presenting to our university medical center's ED, assessed by neurology residents. We collected bHIT results (abnormal/peripheral or normal/central) and whether patients were admitted to the stroke unit or general neurological ward. Final diagnosis (VN, n = 24; PCS, n = 14) was determined by clinical course, magnetic resonance imaging, and vHIT. Results The bHIT's accuracy was only 58%. Its sensitivity for VN was high (88%), but due to many false-abnormal bHITs in PCS (36%), the specificity was low (64%). The vHIT yielded excellent specificity (100%) and moderate sensitivity (67%). The decision on the patient's further care was almost arbitrary and independent from the bHIT: 58% of VN and 57% of PCS patients were admitted to the stroke unit. Conclusions The bHIT, applied by nonexperts during routine practice in the ED, has low accuracy, is too often mistaken as abnormal/peripheral, and is not consistently used for patients' in-hospital triage. As false-abnormal bHITs can lead to misdiagnosis/mistreatment of stroke patients, we recommend that bHIT applied by nonexperts should be reassessed by a neuro-otological expert or preferably quantitative vHIT in the ED.

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