Clinical characteristics of patients with dizziness/vertigo showing a dissociation between caloric and video head impulse test results

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Abstract

Objective: To explore the clinical characteristics of patients with dizziness/vertigo who showed a dissociation between the results of the caloric test and video head impulse test (vHIT). Methods: A total of 327 patients who complained of dizziness/vertigo were continuously included. All patients underwent both the horizontal vHIT (h-vHIT) and caloric tests. Of the 327 patients, 69 patients showed a dissociation between the results of the two tests, 4 patients were excluded because the interval between the two tests exceeded 7 days. Finally, 65 patients were included in the analysis. Results: Among the 65 patients, 55 (84.6%) patients showed a positive caloric test (+) with a negative h-vHIT (−), and 10 (15.4%) patients showed a negative caloric test (−) with a positive h-vHIT (+). Peripheral and central lesions were identified in 50 (90.9%) and 5 (9.1%) patients, respectively, in the caloric test (+)/h-vHIT (−) group; and central lesions were found in 6 (60%) patients in caloric test (−)/h-vHIT (+) group. The etiologies were unilateral peripheral vestibular dysfunction (n = 25), Meniere’s disease (MD, n = 10), sudden hearing loss with vertigo (SHLV, n = 7), benign paroxysmal positional vertigo (n = 5), vestibular neuritis (n = 2), autoimmune inner ear disease (n = 1), vestibular migraine (VM, n = 3), multiple sclerosis (n = 1), and multiple system atrophy (n = 1) in the caloric test (+)/h-vHIT (−) group, which were SHLV (n = 3), MD (n = 1), VM (n = 1), episodic ataxia type 2 (n = 1), cerebellopontine angle tumor (N = 1), Parkinson’s disease (n = 1), Persistent postural perceptual dizziness (n = 1), and posterior circulation ischemia (n = 1) in the caloric test (−)/h-vHIT (+) group. Conclusion: Dissociation between the results of caloric test and h-vHIT is not uncommon. A positive caloric test with a negative h-vHIT occurred more frequently, and these patients mostly had peripheral vestibular lesions; while a negative caloric test with a positive h-vHIT was unusual, these patients had both peripheral and central lesions.

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Li, X., Ling, X., Li, Z., Song, N., Ba, X., Yang, B., … Sui, R. (2025). Clinical characteristics of patients with dizziness/vertigo showing a dissociation between caloric and video head impulse test results. Ear, Nose and Throat Journal, 104(5), NP287–NP293. https://doi.org/10.1177/01455613221113790

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