Abstract
ObjectiveTo study the relationship between disability and health-related quality of life in women with vertigo of peripheral origin. MethodsCross-sectional study in 26 women diagnosed with vertigo, classified by type of peripheral vestibular disturbance: benign paroxysmal positional vertigo (BPPV), vestibular neuritis, Ménière's disease, post-trauma and others. In a self-report interview, a 12-item shortform (SF-12) health survey on quality of life was applied; disability was assessed with the questionnaire “Dizziness Handicap Inventory” (DHI). Measures of central tendency, dispersion for the domains and types of vestibular disturbance were used and internal DHI consistency and inter-scale correlation were calculated. ResultsPatients in the vestibular neuritis and Ménière groups displayed a higher level of disability according to the DHI functional (29.5±5.5 vs 27.0±8.8) and physical domains (23.0±4.1 vs 21.5±6.6). Based on the SF-12 domains, greater deterioration in quality of life was perceived in physical (22.9±3.9 vs 22.6±4.6) and emotional performance (15.4±5.0 vs 11.3±6.0), respectively. Acceptable and significant inverse correlations were found between the physical component summary (PCS-12) of the SF-12 and the physical, emotional and functional aspects of the DHI questionnaire (r=−0.51 to −0.78, P<.01). Internal consistency (Cronbach's alpha index) of the DHI questionnaire was appropriate for the sample. ConclusionsThe DHI and the SF-12 are useful, practical and valid instruments for assessing the impact of dizziness on the quality of life of patients with this symptom.
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