[Impaired vestibular diagnosis by the effect of alcohol]

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[Impaired vestibular diagnosis by the effect of alcohol]. / Lockemann, Ute; Westhofen, M.

In: LARYNGO RHINO OTOL, Vol. 75, No. 11, 11, 1996, p. 646-648.

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Lockemann U, Westhofen M. [Impaired vestibular diagnosis by the effect of alcohol]. LARYNGO RHINO OTOL. 1996;75(11):646-648. 11.

Bibtex

@article{601adbe42ce7432995abf29ace46e2a6,
title = "[Impaired vestibular diagnosis by the effect of alcohol]",
abstract = "BACKGROUND: The aim of our study was to estimate the qualitative and quantitative influence of different blood alcohol concentrations on the results of vestibular testing. METHODS: We investigated the influence of ethanol on the results of well established neurootologic tests in 40 persons with blood alcohol concentrations of 0.0%, 0.4%, and 0.8%. RESULTS: The intensity of the vestibuloocular reflex during sinusoidal rotation was not influenced by ethanol. The directional preponderance of the nystagmic responses to the left was enlarged from 5.8% (0.0/1000) to 13.4% (0.4/1000) and to 15.5% (0.8/1000). The capability of suppressing the vestibuloocular reflex by visual fixation was reduced to 70% (0.4/1000) and, respectively, 46% (0.8/1000) of the 0.0/1000 result. The maximum speed of smooth pursuit was diminished to 84.1% (0.4/1000) and, respectively, 65.3% (0.8/1000) of the 0.0/1000 values. The pursuit movements resembled those of patients with central vestibular lesions. The latency of saccades increased from 200 ms (0.0/1000) to 220 ms (0.4 and 0.8/1000); the velocity was not changed by ethanol. At maximum target speed the gain of optokinetic nystagmus was reduced at 0.4/1000 to 66.3% and at 0.8/1000 to 51.7%, with different results to the right and the left side. CONCLUSIONS: Our results show that even slight amounts of ethanol can simulate symptoms of vestibular diseases, resulting in false diagnoses and errors in determining the therapeutic strategy.",
author = "Ute Lockemann and M Westhofen",
year = "1996",
language = "Deutsch",
volume = "75",
pages = "646--648",
journal = "LARYNGO RHINO OTOL",
issn = "0935-8943",
publisher = "Georg Thieme Verlag KG",
number = "11",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - [Impaired vestibular diagnosis by the effect of alcohol]

AU - Lockemann, Ute

AU - Westhofen, M

PY - 1996

Y1 - 1996

N2 - BACKGROUND: The aim of our study was to estimate the qualitative and quantitative influence of different blood alcohol concentrations on the results of vestibular testing. METHODS: We investigated the influence of ethanol on the results of well established neurootologic tests in 40 persons with blood alcohol concentrations of 0.0%, 0.4%, and 0.8%. RESULTS: The intensity of the vestibuloocular reflex during sinusoidal rotation was not influenced by ethanol. The directional preponderance of the nystagmic responses to the left was enlarged from 5.8% (0.0/1000) to 13.4% (0.4/1000) and to 15.5% (0.8/1000). The capability of suppressing the vestibuloocular reflex by visual fixation was reduced to 70% (0.4/1000) and, respectively, 46% (0.8/1000) of the 0.0/1000 result. The maximum speed of smooth pursuit was diminished to 84.1% (0.4/1000) and, respectively, 65.3% (0.8/1000) of the 0.0/1000 values. The pursuit movements resembled those of patients with central vestibular lesions. The latency of saccades increased from 200 ms (0.0/1000) to 220 ms (0.4 and 0.8/1000); the velocity was not changed by ethanol. At maximum target speed the gain of optokinetic nystagmus was reduced at 0.4/1000 to 66.3% and at 0.8/1000 to 51.7%, with different results to the right and the left side. CONCLUSIONS: Our results show that even slight amounts of ethanol can simulate symptoms of vestibular diseases, resulting in false diagnoses and errors in determining the therapeutic strategy.

AB - BACKGROUND: The aim of our study was to estimate the qualitative and quantitative influence of different blood alcohol concentrations on the results of vestibular testing. METHODS: We investigated the influence of ethanol on the results of well established neurootologic tests in 40 persons with blood alcohol concentrations of 0.0%, 0.4%, and 0.8%. RESULTS: The intensity of the vestibuloocular reflex during sinusoidal rotation was not influenced by ethanol. The directional preponderance of the nystagmic responses to the left was enlarged from 5.8% (0.0/1000) to 13.4% (0.4/1000) and to 15.5% (0.8/1000). The capability of suppressing the vestibuloocular reflex by visual fixation was reduced to 70% (0.4/1000) and, respectively, 46% (0.8/1000) of the 0.0/1000 result. The maximum speed of smooth pursuit was diminished to 84.1% (0.4/1000) and, respectively, 65.3% (0.8/1000) of the 0.0/1000 values. The pursuit movements resembled those of patients with central vestibular lesions. The latency of saccades increased from 200 ms (0.0/1000) to 220 ms (0.4 and 0.8/1000); the velocity was not changed by ethanol. At maximum target speed the gain of optokinetic nystagmus was reduced at 0.4/1000 to 66.3% and at 0.8/1000 to 51.7%, with different results to the right and the left side. CONCLUSIONS: Our results show that even slight amounts of ethanol can simulate symptoms of vestibular diseases, resulting in false diagnoses and errors in determining the therapeutic strategy.

M3 - SCORING: Zeitschriftenaufsatz

VL - 75

SP - 646

EP - 648

JO - LARYNGO RHINO OTOL

JF - LARYNGO RHINO OTOL

SN - 0935-8943

IS - 11

M1 - 11

ER -