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Query: UMLS:C0042571 (
vertigo
)
7,148
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The causes, clinical indications and diagnosis and differential diagnosis of cardiac disorders which may lead to cerebral symptoms are illustrated on the basis of a review of the present day level of scientific research. Principally involved are cerebral ischaemias arising from cerebral embolisms or from reduction of cardiac output in cardiovalvular and myocardial disorders. The incidence of all embolisms of cardiac origin makes up 10% of all ischaemic cerebral infarcts, with auricular fibrillation, irrespective of its origin, mitral stenosis, myocardial infarct, mitral insufficiency and combined mitral valve defects, and, in younger patients, mitral valve prolapse, being, in this order of frequency, of primary clinical significance. The other cardiovalvular and myocardial disorders have, in comparison, a relatively low incidence of cerebral embolisms. Haemodynamically induced cerebral ischaemias frequently occur in the form of complications following acute cardiac arrest, in myocarditis and in case of primary cardiomyopathies resulting from cardiac insufficiency or complicating bradyarrhythmia. They are clinically apparent in the form of syncope, and other impairments of consciousness of various levels of seriousness with and without indications of cerebral origin, extending up to coma. In view of the high incidence of 25% of acute cerebral ischaemias in cases of cardiac disease, not only neurological but also detailed cardiological investigation is vital in all cases for a correct diagnosis and for the selection of a suitable course of treatment. Cerebral complications in bradyarrhythmia and endocarditis are discussed in the context of a review of the relevant literature together with consideration of their epidemiology, aetiology, pathophysiology and clinical profile. Pathological sinus-bradycardia, bradyarrhythmia absoluta, sinu-atrial and atrio-ventricular blockages, carotid-sinus and sick-sinus node syndrome, paroxysmal atrial tachycardia, AV-node tachycardias, and auricular fibrillation and flutter, taken as a whole, lead to cerebral complications affected patients in 5 to 10% of afflictions of the central nervous system occur in 50% of patients suffering from complete AV blockage and, at a not precisely definable frequency, in patients suffering from other bradyarrhythmias. In addition to transitory, uncharacteristic symptoms such as dizziness,
vertigo
, impairment of vision and balance,
presyncope
, syncope and Adams-Stokes syndrome dominate the clinical profile. Endocarditis, with an incidence of 0.01 to 0.05% in the overall population, results in central nervous system complications in 12 to 25% of cases on average.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Heart diseases as a cause of cerebral symptoms and syndromes]. 222 59
A 34 year old female had a history of dizziness and
presyncope
. She had many risk factors for atherosclerosis including smoking 30 packs of cigarettes/year, using oral contraceptives (OCs) for almost 10 years, somewhat elevated blood sugars, strong family history of heart disease and diabetes, and hypertension. During an examination in 1983, she had an elevated blood pressure in the right arm but a reading could not be found in the left arm. The physician heard a grade III rough, blowing systolic bruit over the right subclavian artery moving into the right carotid artery. Pulses of both carotid arteries were normal. Heart sounds were normal. While the right brachial and radial pulses were fine, there were none on the left side. Laboratory tests showed a serum cholesterol of 258 mg/dl, a fasting blood sugar of 92 mg/dl, a white blood cell count of 8400, and a normal differential count. The arch aortogram showed a 50-60% stenosis beginning at the innominate artery and a completely occluded left subclavian artery at its origin. Physicians performed an aortoinnominate bypass operation using a Dacron prosthetic graft. This operation alleviated the symptoms, but 2 years later she had bilateral dysesthesias in her upper arms and
vertigo
returned. Her right arm became more and more limp while her left arm did so mildly. The aortoinnominate graft and the left subclavian artery were occluded. Physicians did coronary angioplasty using the right transfemoral route and corrected both lesions in her brachiocephalic system. they used a technique which eased safe crossing of the occluded subclavian segment (covering the catheter tip with a J curve guidewire). Following the operation, the patient had superb brachial and radial pulses in both arms. Physicians advised her to discontinue using OCs and tobacco products. At months 1 and 5, the symptoms were gone and vital signs were fine.
...
PMID:Percutaneous transluminal angioplasty for innominate artery stenosis and total occlusion of subclavian artery in Takayasu's-type arteritis. 256 38
To investigate the pacemaker syndrome (PS) presenting a mixture of signs and symptoms (syncope,
presyncope
, nausea, dyspnoea,
vertigo
, loss of physical fitness, congestive heart failure) and related to ventricular pacing, the authors measured cardiac output (CO), peripheral blood pressure (PAP) and peripheral resistance (PR) during continuous atrial and/or ventricular pacing in two groups: patients with and without PS. In both groups a significant decrease in CO was found between atrial and ventricular pacing. A significant difference between the two groups was found in the degree of PAP drop which was significant in the PS group, in the group without PS insignificant. On the other hand, the PR increase at ventricular pacing was in the PS group insignificant, in the symptomless group significant. It is concluded that ventricular pacing causes a CO decrease due to loss of normal atrial transmission. Hypotension in PS patients is connected with an atrial reflex that inhibits normal vascular tone.
...
PMID:The pacemaker syndrome: a haemodynamic complication of ventricular pacing. 323 5
Head upright tilt table testing has emerged as a standard technique for the evaluation of patients with recurrent unexplained syncope. To determine the specificity of head upright tilt table testing with and without a low dose isoproterenol infusion, the following study was undertaken. A total of 34 normal volunteers (21 men, 13 women, mean age 32.9 +/- 1.7 years) with no history of syncope,
presyncope
, or
vertigo
underwent head upright tilt table testing for 45 minutes. A positive test was defined as the production of syncope or
presyncope
associated with hypotension and bradycardia. If the test was negative the patient was lowered to the supine position and a low dose isoproterenol infusion started (sufficient to raise the heart rate 20-25% above baseline) and the patient retilted for 20 minutes. Three subjects (8.8%; 95% CI: 2, 26; P = 0.23) developed syncope during the test, two during the baseline tilt, and one during isoproterenol infusion. Interestingly, one of these subjects later had a clinical syncopal episode. We conclude that head up tilt table testing at 80 degrees with or with out low level isoproterenol infusion provides an adequate specificity.
...
PMID:Responses of normal subjects during 80 degrees head upright tilt table testing with and without low dose isoproterenol infusion. 927 44
Dizziness is a complex and frustrating symptom of potentially numerous causes. The history and physical examination can elicit the category that best characterizes the dizziness:
vertigo
,
presyncope
, dysequilibrium, or lightheadedness. If the cause of dizziness cannot be found or treated directly, medications may suppress symptoms. Surgery for
vertigo
includes conservative and destructive procedures. Rehabilitation is often a useful adjunct in the treatment of many types of dizziness.
...
PMID:The diagnosis and treatment of dizziness. 992 68
The structured clinical history is the most sensitive test for diagnosing
vertigo
. Its diagnostic effectiveness on the first visit was analyzed and key signs and symptoms with high predictive value for common causes of
vertigo
were identified. One hundred outpatients who complained of dizziness or loss of balance were evaluated using a structured clinical interview. Each questionnaire was examined independently by three blinded investigators, who assigned a diagnosis and identified the elements of the history that figured most prominently in the diagnosis. The gold standard was defined as independent selection of the same diagnostic category by all three investigators. A first-visit diagnosis was obtained in 40% of patients (95% confidence interval 30-50%): 38% women and 42% men. Causes included benign positional paroxysmal
vertigo
(BPPV, 13 patients), headache-associated
vertigo
(9), Meniere disease (7), cervical
vertigo
(3), psychiatric dizziness (2), post-traumatic
vertigo
(2), vertebro-basilar transient ischemic attack (1), vestibular neuritis (1), convulsive seizure (1), and
presyncope
(1). The best predictors of BPPV were the precipitating mechanism (specificity [SP] 100%), positional nystagmus (sensitivity [SE] 90%, SP 63%), and the Dix-Hallpike test (SE 82%, SP 71%). Elements predictive of headache-associated
vertigo
were duration of the attack (minutes) and a personal history of headache (both, SP 100%). Other predictors were facial hypoesthesia (SE 92%, SP 47%) and associated neurological disease (SE 82%, SP 58%).
...
PMID:[Diagnosis of common causes of vertigo using a structured clinical history]. 1079 28
Dizziness is prevalent in all adult populations, causing considerable morbidity and utilization of health services. In the community, the prevalence of dizziness ranges from 1.8% in young adults to more than 30% in the elderly. In the primary care setting, dizziness increases in frequency as a presenting complaint; as many as 7% of elderly patients present with this symptom. Classification of dizziness by subtype (
vertigo
,
presyncope
, disequilibrium, and other) assists in the differential diagnosis. Various disease entities may cause dizziness, and the reported frequency of specific diagnoses varies widely, depending on setting, patient age, and investigator bias. Life-threatening illnesses are rare in patients with dizziness, but many have serious functional impairment. Dizziness can be difficult to diagnose, particularly in elderly persons, in whom it often represents dysfunction in more than one body system. Given the relatively underdeveloped state of the empirical literature on dizziness, investigators would benefit from use of consistent criteria to describe dizziness symptoms and establish diagnoses. Investigation of the effects of testing and treatment should focus on diagnoses that are life threatening or lead to significant morbidity. In the elderly, a function-oriented approach should be studied and compared with current diagnosis-focused strategies. Alternative therapies for chronic and recurrent dizziness also merit investigation.
...
PMID:Dizziness: state of the science. 1134 17
Dizziness is a common presenting complaint among older patients in primary care. A thorough examination and history can identify the type of dizziness and point to a specific differential diagnosis.
Vertigo
,
presyncope
, dysequilibrium, and non-specific dizziness are associated with a variety of underlying causes, each with specific treatment options.
...
PMID:Dizziness in the older adult, Part 2. Treatments for causes of the four most common symptoms. 1270 55
Vertigo
is one of the types of dizziness with dysequilibrium,
presyncope
and lightheadedness. But what does
vertigo
mean?
Vertigo
indicates a sensation of false movement (generally described like a rotation) but sometimes the patient can describe it like a sensation of tilt. Instead, the word dizziness indicates a sensation of disturbed relation to surrounding objects in space with feelings of rotation or whirling characteristic of
vertigo
as well as non-rotatory swaying, weakness, faintness and unsteadiness characteristic of giddiness. In our review we describe, after brief considerations about functional anatomy of the vestibular system, the most important cause of
vertigo
considering the duration of the symptom; moreover we underline the importance of anamnesis and of the objective examination for a correct differential diagnosis of a dizzy patient. As to objective examination we describe the most important characteristics of nystagmus, that is the only objective sign in
vertigo
, of central and peripheral origin. At last we consider the most efficacious therapies, like as medications (specific and aspecific), surgery (conservative and destructive) and rehabilitation, in relation the characteristics and the causes of
vertigo
.
...
PMID:What is vertigo? 1499 24
Dizziness is a common complaint both in athletes and their nonathletic counterparts. The diagnosis and treatment of dizziness is not significantly different between the two groups. The first step in evaluation involves defining dizziness as either
presyncope
,
vertigo
, disequilibrium, or nonspecific dizziness. Once the symptoms are better defined, the evaluation should then proceed with a careful history, physical examination, and appropriate diagnostic tests as indicated. Treatment strategies can be targeted at the underlying cause with the goal of diminishing or resolving the symptoms as well as preventing their recurrence. This article focuses on the diagnosis of dizziness and subsequent treatment regimens with particular attention paid to
presyncope
and
vertigo
.
...
PMID:The dizzy athlete. 1721 9
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