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HKCEM College Tutorial. Dizziness (Scenario B). Author Dr. TW Wong revised by Dr. Lam Pui Kin , Rex Oct., 2013. Scenario B-- M 66, DM, HT. O Today, sudden P Spontaneous onset, no provoking factor Q spinning sensation R increase vertigo with turning of head/body
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HKCEM College Tutorial Dizziness(Scenario B) Author Dr. TW Wongrevised by Dr. Lam Pui Kin, Rex Oct., 2013
Scenario B-- M 66, DM, HT • O Today, sudden • P Spontaneous onset, no provoking factor • Q spinning sensation • R increase vertigo with turning of head/body • S can sit up but cannot walk • T for a few hours; no previous episode • Associated symptoms: headache + vomiting; no limb weakness • Exam: essentially normal except +ve for nystagmus; no neck rigidity
Nystagmus? Central vs Peripheral Peripheral • Horizontal • Fixed direction • Fatigable • Disappear with fixation Central • Horizontal; vertical • Change direction with gaze • No fatigue • Fixation has no effect
Effect of fixation Hotson et al. Acute Vestibular Sx. NEJM 1998;339 (10)
Any other features to suggest central origin? • Vascular risk factors e.g. HT, smoker • Headache, neck rigidity • Focal signs e.g. double vision • Cerebellar sign e.g. truncal ataxia < 50% pts with cerebellar infarct have nystagmus
Nystagmus is horizontal and in one direction • What is your plan of action ? now… • Symptomatic relief • Investigations
Investigations • Hb 12 g/dL • H’stix 10 mmol/L • ECG changes NSR, non-specific ST/T • LFT, RFT pending Patient is better but still dizzy after stemetil, what now?
Patient is admitted to EM ward for further management • BP/P • Continue stemetil, panadol
Progress in EM ward • Has increased headache + repeated vomiting • neck rigidity +/- • Truncal ataxia? What should one try to rule out? Your action?
Stroke e.g. cerebellar should be suspected CT scan Consult Neuro PRN
The end Back to Dizziness (introduction)