Abstract

The primary aim was to determine the sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value (PPV), and negative predictive value (NPV) of the bedside head-impulse test (bHIT) using the video HIT (vHIT) as the gold standard for quantifying the function of the vestibulo-ocular reflex (VOR). Secondary aims were to determine the bHIT inter-rater reliability and sensitivity in detecting unilateral and bilateral vestibulopathy. In this prospective study, 500 consecutive outpatients presenting to a tertiary neuro-otology clinic with vertigo or dizziness of various vestibular etiologies who did not have any of the pre-defined exclusion criteria were recruited. Bedside HITs were done by three experienced neuro-otology clinicians masked to the diagnosis, and the results were compared with the vHIT. The patients were likewise blinded to the bHIT and vHIT findings. Patients with VOR deficits were identified on the vHIT by referencing to the pre-selected "pathological" gain of <0.7. The data were then analyzed using standard statistical methods. For the primary outcome (vHIT "pathological" VOR gain <0.7), the three-rater mean bHIT sensitivity = 66.0%, PPV = 44.3%, specificity = 86.2%, and NPV = 93.9%. Shifting the "pathological" threshold from 0.6 to 0.9 caused the bHIT sensitivity to decrease while the PPV increased. Specificity and NPV tended to remain stable. Inter-rater agreement was moderate (Krippendorff's alpha = 0.54). For unilateral vestibulopathy, overall bHIT sensitivity = 69.6%, reaching 86.67% for severely reduced unilateral gain. For VOR asymmetry <40% and >40%, the bHIT sensitivity = 51.7 and 83%, respectively. For bilateral vestibulopathy, overall bHIT sensitivity = 66.3%, reaching 86.84% for severely reduced bidirectional gains. For the primary outcome, the bHIT had moderate sensitivity and low PPV. While the study did not elucidate the best choice for vHIT reference, it demonstrated how the bHIT test properties varied with vHIT thresholds: selecting a lower threshold improved the sensitivity but diminished the PPV, while a higher threshold had the opposite effect. The VOR was most likely normal if the bHIT was negative due to its high NPV. The bHIT was moderately sensitive for detecting unilateral and bilateral vestibulopathy overall, but better for certain subgroups.

Highlights

  • In 1988, a bedside test for the angular vestibulo-ocular reflex was described: the head thrust or head-impulse test (HIT) [1, 2]

  • A total of 1000 vHITs (500 patients each with rightward and leftward vHIT, Figure 1) and 2546 bHITS were performed

  • For a vHIT “pathological” cutoff gain

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Summary

Introduction

In 1988, a bedside test for the angular vestibulo-ocular reflex (aVOR) was described: the head thrust or head-impulse test (HIT) [1, 2]. The patient’s head was quickly turned to the right or left, and the examiner looked whether the patient’s eyes stayed on the target, or the patient made re-fixation saccades, which would indicate a high-frequency aVOR deficit. This has been assumed to be the clinical standard for the bedside examination of the aVOR. It was shown that the bedside HIT (bHIT) can be flawed because it failed to detect “covert saccades” [3] This clinically imperceptible eye movement typically occurred in vestibular-deficient patients who could generate a very early saccade during the first 100 ms of the HIT, and its occurrence seemed to increase with increasing head-turning velocity [4]. Patients with cerebellar (flocculus) dysfunction tended to have a mild centrally mediated VOR deficit, resulting in bilateral falsely pathological bHIT [5]

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