Abstract

ObjectiveTo investigate the relative sensitivity and agreement of caloric testing and video head impulse test (vHIT) across four groups of vestibular disorders. MethodsCaloric and vHIT results of 118 patients with either Ménière’s disease, vestibular neuritis/labyrinthitis, vestibular migraine, or vestibular schwannoma were retrospectively analyzed. vHIT gain, gain asymmetry, and catch-up-saccades (≥100°/sec) were compared with reference limits of 91 controls. ResultsAbnormal caloric results and vHIT gain were recorded in 57.6 % and 33.1 % of patients, respectively. Consideration of all three measures increased vHIT sensitivity to 43.2 %, and concordance with caloric results improved from 66.1 % to 70.3 %. A significant interaction effect confirmed the relationship between tests depended on the diagnosis (p = 0.013). Vestibular migraine and vestibular neuritis/labyrinthitis produced similar results on both tests, usually normal and abnormal respectively. Vestibular schwannoma produced more caloric abnormalities than vHIT gain but not compared with catch-up-saccades and gain asymmetry; Ménière’s disease produced more caloric abnormalities than all vHIT measures. When vHIT was normal (all measures), a 37 % canal paresis was 90 % specific for Ménière’s disease. ConclusionsRates of vHIT catch-up-saccades and gain asymmetry can improve sensitivity and concordance with caloric testing, but this is disease-dependent. SignificancevHIT outcome measures are complementary to the caloric test and each other.

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