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Peripheral Vertigo: Sensitivity and Specificity

Introduction: Remember that vertigo describes a spinning sensation. "Dizziness" as a symptom can refer to many different things, e.g. presyncope. There are two major categories within vertigo: central and peripheral lesions.

Peripheral causes of vertigo involve dysfunction of the vestibular apparatus or nerve.

This includes many specific causes, including:

  • Benign Paroxysmal Positional Vertigo (BPPV)
  • Vestibular Neuritis
  • Meniere's Disease
  • See the UpToDate article: http://www.utdol.com/online/content/topic.do?topicKey=genneuro/7125

    [Edit Diagnosis] [Merge dx] [Add prevalence]

    Tags: Neurologic Tag this Diagnosis.

    Prevalence

    Population / CalculatorPrevalence Comments / Study / Link
    Patients with dizziness 40% Am J Med 1999 Nov;107(5):468-78. PMID 10569302
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    The sensitivity and specificity of findings for Peripheral Vertigo are listed below. See the left navigation bar to change the display.

    Pre-Test Probability (Prevalence): %. Post-Test Probability (Predictive Value): %. Switch to display mode.
    **Note that calculating probabilities from more than one finding is inherently inaccurate because findings are not independent. (For example, using two positive findings that share a common pathogenesis is likely to overestimate the true probability.)
    FindingResult SensitivitySpecificity
    [ + ] Dix-Hallpike Maneuver Sensitivity = 78%
    [ + ] Head Impulse Test + 0 - 35%95%
    [ + ] Matutinal Vertigo + 0 - 51%69%