200 likes | 252 Views
Clinical Vignette: Spatial Disorientation. MAJ Tim Cho and LCDR Jim Gilson Occupational/Aerospace Medicine Residents.
E N D
Clinical Vignette: Spatial Disorientation MAJ Tim Cho and LCDR Jim Gilson Occupational/Aerospace Medicine Residents
MAJ TIM CHO, LCDR JIM GILSON AND ALL OTHERS INVOLVED IN THE PLANNING, DEVELOPMENT, AND PRESENTATION OF THIS LIVE CME EDUCATIONAL ACTIVITY PROVIDE THE FOLLOWING DISCLOSURE INFORMATION: “NOTHING TO DISCLOSE”
OUTLINE • Introduction • Clinical Presentation • History • Differential Diagnosis • Review of Systems • Physical examination • Investigations • Patient Course • Discussion • References • Questions/Comments
INTRODUCTION • Spatial Orientation relies on visual cueing, a functioning vestibular organ system, and proprioception • Spatial disorientation occurs when the pilot’s perception of direction (attitude) is miscued to the actual surrounding • Somatogyral (semicircular canals) and somatogravic (utricle and saccule) illusions occur • This is a clinical vignette that teaches us to appreciate the complexities of Spatial Disorientation
CLINICAL PRESENTATION(History) • 31 year old active duty Apache instructor pilotpresents with a chief complaint of a tumblingsensation when the air-craft is in pitch. He is a reliable historian and recollects the initial and transient sensation whendeployed 2 years ago, however upon PCS’ing to FortRucker, AL, the sensation has now become a distraction when flying, resulting in him being more anxious.
CLINICAL PRESENTATION(History) • Pertinent (+): sensation of tumbling when the aircraft is in pitch, anxiety, headaches • Pertinent (-): no acute illness, no drug or ETOH history, no blurry vision/double vision, no ringing of the ears, no musculoskeletal weakness, no cardiac history, no medication, psychiatric or motion sickness history, no disorientation when rotating
CLINICAL PRESENTATION(Differential Diagnosis) • vertigo • benign paroxysmal positional vertigo • migraine headaches • anxiety • vestibular neuronitis • labyrinthitis • acoustic neuroma • inner ear anomaly
CLINICAL PRESENTATION(Review of Systems and Physical Exam) • General Appearance: WD, WN M in NAD • Cranial II- XII: WNL • Sensation: WNL • Motor: WNL • Coordination/Cere-bellum: WNL • Gait and Stance: WNL • Reflexes: WNL • HEENT: chronic wisdom teeth pain • Cardiovascular: unremarkable • Pulmonary: unremarkable • Gastrointestinal: unremarkable • Genitourinary: unremarkable • Skin: unremarkable • Musculoskeletal: unremarkable • Neurological: positional vertigo • Psychiatric: unremarkable
CLINICAL PRESENTATION(MSDD) Control Subject Centrifugal Force Resultant Gravito-inertial Force Gravity
CLINICAL PRESENTATION(Patient Course) • April 2014: • ENT/Otolaryngology Examination • July 2014: • NAMI Neurology examination • MSDD • August 2014: • Battalion staff • Restricted flying w/IP • December 2014: • Eye Movement De-sensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR) therapy, • Wisdom teeth pulled out
DISCUSSION • Lesson Learned • On-going case • Leadership support combined with medical management is a viable course of action • Tri-service waiver process • Vertigo • The way forward • Additional cueing to close the gap between perceived and true orientation of pilot and environment
AEROMEDICAL WAIVERS (Vertigo)
REFERENCES Davis, J. R., Johnson, R. & Stepanek, J. (4th ed.). (2008). Fundamentals of aerospace medicine.Lippincott Williams & Wilkins.Federal Aviation Administration. (n.d.). Aerospace medicine dispositions. Retrieved from https://www.faa.gov/about/office_org/headquarters_offices/avs/United States Airforce. (n.d.). Air force waiver guide. Retrieved from www.wpafb.af.milUnited States Army. (n.d.). Flight surgeon’s aeromedical checklists & references. Retrieved from https://vfso.rucker.amedd.army.milUnited States Navy. (n.d.). Aeromedical reference and waiver guide. Retrieved from http://www.med.navy.mil/sites/nmotc/nami/arwg/ *Special thank you to, CAPT(ret.) Rupert and Casey