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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0042571 (
vertigo
)
7,148
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Tinnitus and
vertigo
, two common neurological complaints, often challenge the physician's ability with respect to possible etiology.
Objective tinnitus
can result from an abnormally patent eustachian tube, from tetanic contractions of the muscles of the soft palate, or from vascular abnormalities within the head or neck. Subjective tinnitus refers to lesions involving the external ear canal, tympanic membrane, ossicles, cochlea, auditory nerve, brainstem, and cortex. As many as 50% of patients with tinnitus do not exhibit associated hearing loss; in these patients, the cause of the tinnitus is rarely identified. An illusion of movement is specific for vestibular system disease--a peripheral or central location depending upon associated audiologic and neurologic symptoms, respectively. However, a presyncopal, light-headed sensation is most commonly associated with diffuse cerebral ischemia: in the young patient, this may be caused by a hyperventilation syndrome; in the aged individual, this can result from diffuse atherosclerotic cerebrovascular disease and decreased cardiac output. Postural and gait imbalance associated with acute
vertigo
indicates a unilateral peripheral vestibular or a central vestibular lesion; if
vertigo
is absent, either a cerebellar, proprioceptive, or bilateral peripheral vestibular lesion is likely. Transient oscillopsia suggests unilateral peripheral vestibular lesions. Permanent oscillopsia indicates a bilateral peripheral vestibular lesion or--in the absence of severe
vertigo
--brainstem or cerebellar damage.
...
PMID:[Differential diagnosis of tinnitus and vertigo. A review]. 406 94