A new ocular motor sign in acute vestibular syndrome: Is HINTS plus enough?

Authors

  • Vishal Pawar Aster Gardens Specialty clinic, UAE
  • Aishwarya Anand MCV ENT hospitals, India
  • Prasanna Kulkarni Aster Medinova diagnostic center, Dubai, UAE
  • Ji Soo Kim Department of Neurology, Seoul National University College of Medicine, Seoul, Korea

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.54029/2021zzt

Keywords:

pseudo-acute unilateral vestibulopathy, posterior circulation stroke, cerebellar stroke, positive head impulse test, posterior inferior cerebellar artery infarct, centripetal nystagmus

Abstract

A 66-year-old hypertensive and diabetic male presented with acute vestibular syndrome for three days. HINTS plus examination was performed. The horizontal head impulse test was positive on the left side. Video oculography showed centripetal nystagmus on gaze testing in the dark and test of skew was negative. There was no new hearing loss on the finger rub test. On neurological examination, he had severe postural instability and saccadic smooth pursuit. Radio-imaging studies were conducted to rule out the possibility of stroke. CT brain showed infarction in the territory of the medial branch of the right posterior inferior cerebellar artery. MRI brain confirmed the diagnosis. Thus, posterior circulation stroke can present with acute vestibular syndrome mimicking acute unilateral vestibulopathy. However, the presence of associated neurological symptoms like gait ataxia, centripetal nystagmus and vascular risk factors pointed towards a central cause. Clinical evaluation suggesting a peripheral lesion should never be taken in isolation and needs to be correlated with other associated signs. We describe centripetal nystagmus without fixation as a new oculomotor sign in acute vestibular syndrome.

Published

2022-01-01

Issue

Section

Case Report