Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0028738 (nystagmus)
7,431 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A battery of vestibular and audiological tests was administered to eight patients with panic disorder and 13 patients with agoraphobia and panic attacks, all of whom experienced dizziness during their panic attacks. Positional or spontaneous nystagmus was present in 67% of the subjects. Abnormal responses were found in caloric testing (56%), rotational testing (35%), and posturography (32%). Pure tone audiograms were abnormal in 26% of the subjects and acoustic reflexes were abnormal in 44% of the subjects. Six of eight patients tested had an abnormal brainstem auditory evoked potential. The possible importance of the findings and their implications for further research are discussed.
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PMID:Otoneurological examination in panic disorder and agoraphobia with panic attacks: a pilot study. 387 76

Anxiety is a common symptom is vertigo patients. ACute anxiety is known in neurology and psychiatry as panic disorder. The cardiovascular and the gastrointestinal subtypes have been used in the classification of panic disorders up to now. Frommberger and co-workers (1993) have also defined a vestibular subtype. In this study, we have compared the neurotologic test results of 53 patients with vertigo in combination with panic disorder and of 53 patients with balance disorders without anxiety to clarify, whether disturbances in the vestibular systems can be objectivated or not. Differences of both groups were found in history data, especially in the vertigo characteristics, the accompanying vegetative symptoms, the releasing mechanisms, the duration of the attacks, and the total time of the dizziness complaints. The mean age was less significant in the patients with panic disorder than in the control group. The test results of the anxiety group showed a higher rate of right-directed spontaneous nystagmus and less pathological vestibular findings in the caloric and rotating test as well as in the Unterberger stepping test when compared to the control group. Some of the patients with panic disorder developed acute anxiety during the examination.
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PMID:[Anxiety syndrome in vertigo patients. A comparison of neuro-otologic findings in patients with and without anxiety]. 867 98

Many reports have appeared in the medical literature concerning the clinical examination at the bedside of patients with vertigo and, even if few controversial opinions exist, the observation of one or more kinds of nystagmus is generally regarded as suggesting an organic aetiology. So far, the presence of nystagmus has been generally considered to be crucially important for clinicians who are daily asked to differentiate between an "organic" cause of vertigo (for example, a labyrinthine dysfunction) and a "non-organic" cause of vertigo, such as a panic disorder. Albeit, it should not be forgotten that the central nervous system is able to resolve the asymmetry of vestibulo-ocular reflexes, due to a peripheral vestibular failure, by means of compensatory mechanisms so that nystagmus is rapidly abolished after the acute attack of vertigo. In addition, visual fixation elicits sub-cortical inhibitory pathways to the vestibular nuclei so that spontaneous nystagmus is remarkably reduced by light. In order to more easily detect nystagmus, attempts have been made to minimize the interference of visual fixation by means of positive lenses (Frenzel's glasses) and light occluding masks with infrared cameras (videonystagmoscopy) which have in part replaced direct observation of the patient's eyes, albeit no systematic validation of the advantages has been reported yet. To investigate the usefulness of these 3 low-cost methods to detect nystagmus, 528 outpatients presenting peripheral vestibular hypofunction, diagnosed by a complete audiological and vestibular examination, including caloric tests, were enrolled in the present study, while 133 subjects with normal vestibular function acted as a control group. All patients and control subjects underwent a standardized clinical examination based on search for spontaneous, positioning and head-shaking nystagmus detected by direct observation of patient's eyes, Frenzel's glasses and videonystagmoscopy. Specificity of the three techniques were 35.6, 43.7 and 91.6, whilst sensitivity was 88.7, 88.7 and 84.2, respectively. Finally, discriminant analysis based on the presence/absence of at least one kind of nystagmus was computed for each technique and showed that videonystagmoscopy allowed the examiner to correctly classify both pathological and normal subjects more frequently (> 77% of cases) than the other two methods (about 50%). It is concluded that only videonystagmoscopy is an acceptable technique for screening a labyrinth defect in a population of outpatients with vertigo.
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PMID:Clinical examination of labyrinthine-defective patients out of the vertigo attack: sensitivity and specificity of three low-cost methods. 1688 51

In order to investigate the relationship between chronic dizziness and vestibular function in patients with panic disorder, in the present study neurotologic findings in 15 patients with panic disorder and chronic dizziness were compared with those in 15 patients with chronic dizziness, without panic disorder. All underwent neurotologic screening for spontaneous, positional and positioning nystagmus with head-shaking and head-thrust tests, an audiometric examination and electronystagmography with bithermal stimulation according to Freyss. A significantly higher number of patients with panic disorder and chronic dizziness showed pathological neurotologic findings in comparison to subjects with chronic dizziness only (9 and 2 patients, respectively; p < 0.05). Most patients with panic disorder showed signs of peripheral vestibular disorders. These results suggest that the complaint of dizziness in patients with panic disorder may be linked to a malfunction of the vestibular system and vestibular disorders may play a role in the pathophysiology of panic disorder. Possible mechanisms underlying this finding are discussed. In patients with panic disorder and chronic dizziness between panic attacks, a careful neurotologic examination is warranted.
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PMID:Vestibular testing in patients with panic disorder and chronic dizziness. 1819 54