• 8 de julho de 2016

Yongchao Li, MD , and Baogan Peng, MD, PhD

Abstract

Cervical vertigo is characterized by vertigo from the cervical spine. However, whether cervical vertigo is an independent entity still remains controversial. In this narrative review, we outline the basic science and clinical evidence for cervical vertigo according to the current literature. So far, there are 4 different hypotheses explaining the vertigo of a cervical origin, including proprioceptive cervical vertigo, Barré-Lieou syndrome, rotational vertebral artery vertigo, and migraine-associated cervicogenic vertigo. Proprioceptive cervical vertigo and rotational vertebral artery vertigo have survived with time. Barré-Lieou syndrome once was discredited, but it has been resurrected recently by increased scientific evidence. Diagnosis depends mostly on patients’ subjective feelings, lacking positive signs, specific laboratory examinations and clinical trials, and often relies on limited clinical experiences of clinicians. Neurological, vestibular, and psychosomatic disorders must first be excluded before the dizziness and unsteadiness in cervical pain syndromes can be attributed to a cervical origin. Treatment for cervical vertigo is challenging. Manual therapy is recommended for treatment of proprioceptive cervical vertigo. Anterior cervical surgery and percutaneous laser disc decompression are effective for the cervical spondylosis patients accompanied with Barré- Liéou syndrome. As to rotational vertebral artery vertigo, a rare entity, when the exact area of the arterial compression is identified through appropriate tests such as magnetic resonance angiography (MRA), computed tomography angiography (CTA) or digital subtraction angiography (DSA) decompressive surgery should be the chosen treatment.

 

Key words:

Cervical vertigo, dizziness, whiplash injury, neck pain, cervical spondylosis, manual therapy, vestibular rehabilitation, vertebrobasilar insufficiency

 

Link para o artigo:

http://www.painphysicianjournal.com/current/pdf?article=MjM3NQ%3D%3D&journal=89

Postagem relacionada

What does the dissociation between the results of video head impulse versus caloric testingreveal about the vestibular dysfunction in Ménière’s disease?

McGarvie LA1, Curthoys IS, MacDougall HG, Halmagyi GM. Author information 1Institute of Clinical Neurosciences, Royal Prince Alfred Hospital , Camperdown NSW , Australia. Abstract CONCLUSION: It is suggested that the different results of rotational (video head impulse – vHIT) and caloric tests in patients with Ménière’s disease (MD) may be a consequence of the physical […]

Glucose metabolism disorders and vestibular manifestations: evaluation through computerized dynamic posturography

Roseli Saraiva Moreira Bittara, Maruska D’Aparecida Santosa, Raquel Mezzalira Introduction Global sugar consumption has increased in the past 50 years; its abusive intake is responsible for peripheral insulin resistance, which causes the metabolic syndrome – obesity, diabetes mellitus, hypertension, and coronary heart disease. Objective To evaluate the effect of a fractionated diet without glucose as […]