OBJECTIVES: This guideline provides evidence-based recom-
mendations on
managing benign
paroxysmal positional vertigo
(BPPV), which is the most common vestibular
disorder in adults, with a lifetime prevalence of 2.4 percent. The guideline targets patients
aged 18 years or
older with a potential diagnosis of
BPPV, evaluated in any setting
in which an adult with BPPV would be identified,
monitored, or managed. This guideline
is intended for all clinicians
who are likely to diagnose and manage adults with BPPV. PURPOSE: The
primary purposes of this guideline are to im- prove quality of care and outcomes
for BPPV by improving the accurate and efficient diagnosis
of BPPV, reducing
the inappro- priate use of vestibular suppressant medications, decreasing the inappropriate use of ancillary tests such as radiographic imaging and vestibular testing, and to promote the use of effective
reposi- tioning maneuvers for treatment. In creating this guideline, the American Academy of Otolaryngology—Head and Neck Surgery Foundation selected a panel representing the fields of audiology,
chiropractic medicine, emergency
medicine, family medicine,
ge- riatric medicine, internal
medicine, neurology, nursing,
otolaryn- gology– head and neck surgery,
physical therapy, and physical
medicine and rehabilitation.
RESULTS:
The panel made
strong
recommendations that 1)
cli- nicians should diagnose posterior semicircular
canal BPPV when vertigo associated with nystagmus is provoked
by the
Dix-Hallpike maneuver.
The panel made recommendations that 1) if the
patient has a history compatible
with BPPV and the Dix-Hallpike
test is negative, clinic- ians should perform a supine roll
test to assess for lateral
semicircular canal BPPV; 2) clinicians
should differentiate BPPV from other
causes of imbalance,
dizziness, and vertigo; 3) clinicians should ques-
tion patients with BPPV
for factors
that modify management includ- ing impaired mobility or balance,
CNS disorders,
lack of home sup- port, and increased risk for
falling; 4) clinicians should treat
patients with posterior canal BPPV with
a particle repositioning maneuver (PRM);
5) clinicians
should reassess patients within 1 month
after an initial period of observation or treatment to confirm
symptom reso- lution; 6) clinicians
should evaluate patients with BPPV
who are
initial treatment
failures for persistent BPPV or underlying peripheral
vestibular or CNS
disorders; and 7)
clinicians should counsel
patients regarding the impact of BPPV on their safety, the potential
for disease recurrence, and the importance of follow-up.
The panel
offered as options that 1) clinicians
may offer
vestibular rehabilitation, either self-administered
or with
a clinician, for the initial treatment of
BPPV and 2) clinicians may offer observation as initial management for patients
with BPPV and with assurance
of follow-up.
The panel
made no recommendation concerning
audiometric testing in patients diagnosed
with BPPV.
DISCLAIMER: This clinical
practice guideline is not intended as a sole
source of guidance in managing
benign paroxysmal positional vertigo.
Rather, it is designed to
assist clinicians by providing an
evidence-based framework
for decision-making strategies. The guide-
line is not intended
to replace
clinical judgement or establish a pro- tocol for all individuals
with this condition, and may
not provide
the only appropriate approach to diagnosing and managing this problem.
Received August 20, 2008; accepted August 21, 2008.
0194-5998/$34.00 © 2008 American
Academy of Otolaryngology–Head and Neck Surgery
Foundation. All rights reserved.
doi:10.1016/j.otohns.2008.08.022
|
primary complaint
of dizziness accounts
for 5.6 mil- lion clinic visits
in the United States per year, and between 17 and 42 percent of patients with vertigo ulti- mately receive a diagnosis
of benign paroxysmal positional
vertigo (BPPV).1-3 BPPV is a form of positional vertigo.
● Positional vertigo is defined as a spinning sensation
pro- duced by changes
in head position relative to gravity.
● Benign
paroxysmal positional vertigo
is
defined as a disorder of the inner ear characterized by
repeated epi- sodes of positional vertigo.
Traditionally, the terms benign and paroxysmal have been used to characterize this particular form of
positional vertigo. In this context, the descriptor benign historically implies that BPPV was a form of positional
vertigo not due to any serious CNS disorder and that the overall prognosis for recovery
was favorable.4 However, undiagnosed and untreated BPPV may not have “benign”
functional, health, and quality-of-life impacts. The term paroxysmal in this context describes the rapid and sudden onset of
the vertigo associated with an episode of BPPV. BPPV has also been termed
benign positional vertigo, paroxysmal positional vertigo, positional vertigo,
benign paroxysmal nystagmus, and paroxysmal positional nystagmus. In this
guideline, the panel chose to retain the terminology of BPPV because it is the
most common terminology encountered in the literature and in clinical practice.
BPPV
is most commonly clinically encountered as one of two
variants: BPPV of the posterior semicircular canal (posterior canal BPPV) or
BPPV of the lateral semicircular canal (also known as horizontal canal BPPV).5-7 Posterior canal BPPV
is more
common than horizontal canal BPPV,
constituting approximately 85 to 95 percent of BPPV cases.7
Although debated, posterior canal BPPV is most commonly
thought to be due to canalithiasis. Debris (thought to be fragmented endolymph
particles) entering the posterior ca- nal becomes “trapped” and causes inertial
changes in the posterior canal, thereby
resulting in abnormal
nystagmus and vertigo with head motion in the plane of the canal.7,8
Lateral (horizontal) canal
BPPV accounts for between 5 and
15 percent of BPPV cases.6,7 The etiology of lateral canal BPPV is also felt to be due
to the presence of abnormal debris within the lateral canal,
but the pathophysiology is not as well understood as that of posterior canal BPPV.
Other rare variations include anterior canal BPPV, multiple canal BPPV, and bilateral
multiple canal BPPV.
HEALTH CARE BURDEN
OF BPPV
Overall, the prevalence of BPPV has been reported to range from 10.7 to 64 per 100,000
population9,10 with a lifetime
prevalence of 2.4 percent.11 BPPV is also the most common
vestibular disorder across the lifespan,7,12,13 although the age of onset is most commonly between the fifth and
sev- enth decades of life.4 Given the noteworthy prevalence of BPPV, its health care and societal
impacts are tremendous.
The costs to the health care system and the
indirect costs of BPPV are also significant. It is estimated that it costs approximately $2000 to arrive
at the diagnosis of BPPV, and that 86 percent of patients
suffer some interrupted daily activities and lost days at work because of BPPV.11,14
Therefore, health care costs associated with the diagnosis of BPPV
alone approach $2 billion per year. Furthermore, BPPV is more common in older
individuals with a corre- spondingly more pronounced health and quality-of-life
im- pact. It has been estimated that 9 percent of elderly patients undergoing
comprehensive geriatric assessment for non– balance-related complaints have unrecognized BPPV.15
Older patients with BPPV experience a
greater incidence of falls, depression, and impairments of their daily activi-
ties.15 Furthermore, falls can cause secondary injury
includ- ing fractures or brain injury and may lead to unplanned hospital and nursing home admission. Persistent untreated or undiagnosed vertigo in the elderly leads to
increased caregiver burden, with resultant societal costs including decreased
family productivity and increased risk of nursing home placement. With the
increasing age of the US popu- lation, the incidence and prevalence of BPPV may
corre- spondingly increase over the next 20 years.
BPPV may be diagnosed and treated by multiple
clinical disciplines. Despite its significant
prevalence, and quality- of-life and economic impacts,
considerable practice varia- tions exist in the management of BPPV across
disciplines.16
These variations relate to both diagnostic strategies for BPPV and
rates of utilization of various treatment options available for BPPV within and
across the various medical specialties and disciplines involved in its management.17
Delays in the diagnosis and treatment of BPPV have both cost and
quality-of-life implications for both patients and their caregivers.
Recent data suggest that patients
with BPPV suffer from delays in diagnosis and treatment on the order of months,
and that patients with underlying diagnosis of BPPV often received
inappropriately prescribed medications such as vestibular suppressants and
potentially unnecessary diag- nostic testing.17 Therefore, significant improvements in the diagnosis and
treatment of patients with BPPV may lead to significant health care quality
improvements as well
as medical and societal cost savings. Such improvements may be achievable with the composition and implementation of a well-constructed clinical
practice guideline for BPPV.
PURPOSE OF BPPV GUIDELINE
The
primary purposes of this guideline
are to
improve quality of care and outcomes
for BPPV by improving the accurate and
efficient diagnosis of BPPV, reducing
the inappropriate use of vestibular suppressant medications,
decreasing the inap- propriate use of ancillary testing such as radiographic
im- aging, and increasing the use of appropriate therapeutic repositioning maneuvers. The guideline is intended for all
The guideline
will focus on BPPV, recognizing that BPPV may arise in conjunction with other
neurological or otological conditions, and that the treatment of the symptom components specifically related to BPPV may still be man-
aged according to the guideline. This guideline will not discuss BPPV affecting
the anterior semicircular canal.18 It also will not discuss benign paroxysmal vertigo of
child- hood, disabling positional vertigo due to vascular loop com-
pression in the
brain stem or
vertigo that arises
from changes in head position not related to gravity (ie, vertigo of cervical origin or vertigo of vascular
origin). These condi- tions are physiologically distinct from BPPV.
Existing guidelines and
recommendation documents on BPPV are sparse and are broad reviews
of the literature with
limited multidisciplinary input. Recently published reviews and practice
parameters have focused
on treatment, and have not reported recommendations for
diagnosis and fol- low-up of this condition.19 Our goal was to create a multi- disciplinary guideline
with a specific set of focused recom- mendations based on an established
and transparent process that considers levels of evidence,
harm-benefit balance, and expert
consensus to resolve
gaps in evidence. These specific recommendations may then be used to develop performance measures and identify avenues
for quality improvement.
The primary outcome considered in
this guideline is the resolution of the symptoms associated with BPPV. Second-
ary outcomes considered include a more efficient return to regular activities and work, minimization of the use of
inappropriate medications and unnecessary diagnostic tests, reduction in the
recurrence of BPPV, and reduction in ad- verse events associated with
undiagnosed or untreated BPPV. Other outcomes considered include minimization
of costs in the diagnosis and treatment of BPPV, minimization of return
physician visits, and maximization of the health- related quality
of life of individuals afflicted with BPPV. The significant incidence of BPPV and the wide diversities
of diagnostic and therapeutic interventions for BPPV (Table
1) make this an important condition for an up-to-date evi-
dence-based practice guideline.
METHODS
General
Methods and Literature Search
The guideline was developed by using an explicit and trans- parent a priori protocol for
creating actionable statements based
on supporting evidence
and the harm-benefit
bal- ance.20 The multidisciplinary guideline development panel
was chosen to represent the fields of audiology, chiropractic medicine, emergency
medicine, family medicine, geriatric medicine,
internal medicine, neurology, nursing, otolaryn-
Table 1
Interventions considered in BPPV guideline development
Diagnosis Clinical history
Review of the
medication list
Physical examination
Dix Hallpike (positional) testing
Side-lying maneuver
Post– head-shaking nystagmus
Audiometry
Magnetic resonance imaging
Computed Tomography
Blood tests: complete blood count, serum chemistry, etc.
Frenzel lenses and infrared goggle testing
Electronystagmography
Videonystagmography Balance and gait testing
Vestibular function testing Computerized posturography
Orthostatic balance testing Vestibular caloric testing
Treatment Watchful waiting/observation
Education/information/counseling
Medical therapy (vestibular suppressant
medications, benzodiazepines)
Cervical immobilization with cervical
collar
Patient self-treatment with vestibular
exercises (Brandt-Daroff exercises)
Epley maneuver Semont maneuver
Gufoni maneuver
Physical therapy/vestibular physical therapy
Spinal manipulative therapy
Mastoid vibration
Posterior semicircular canal occlusion
(excluded from guideline)
Singular neurectomy (excluded from guideline)
Vestibular neurectomy (excluded from guideline)
Prevention Head
trauma or whiplash injury as
potential causative
factors
Use of helmets to
prevent head trauma and/or cervical collars
Prolonged bed rest
General anesthesia
gology– head and neck surgery,
physical medicine and re-
habilitation, and physical therapy. Several group members had significant prior experience in developing clinical prac-
tice guidelines, and consultant experts in guideline devel- opment were
available throughout the guideline construc- tion process.
1) Clinical practice
guidelines were identified by limiting the
MEDLINE search to one article using “guideline” as a publication type or title
word. Search of the
National Guideline Clearinghouse (www.guideline.gov)
identi- fied 21 guidelines with a topic of vertigo. After elimi- nation of articles that did not have
BPPV as the primary focus, no guidelines met quality criteria of being pro-
duced under the auspices of a medical association or organization. and having
an explicit method for ranking evidence and linking
evidence to recommendations. One article by the American College of Radiology addressed
“appropriateness criteria” for imaging for BPPV.
2)
Systematic reviews (meta-analyses) were
identified by limiting the
MEDLINE search to 26 articles using a validated filter strategy for systematic reviews.21 Search of the Cochrane Library identified
two relevant reviews that met quality criteria of having
explicit criteria for conducting the literature search and selecting source
articles for inclusion or exclusion.
3)
Randomized controlled trials (RCTs) were identified by a search of the Cochrane Controlled Trials Register, which identified 28 trials with “BPPV” as a title word.
4)
Original research studies were
identified by limiting
the MEDLINE search to articles with a vertigo
(MeSH term) as a focus, published
in English with human subjects, and not having a publication
type of case report. The resultant data set of 741 articles yielded 323 related
to diagnosis, 119 to treatment, 223 to etiology, and 125 to prognosis.
Results of all literature searches
were distributed to guideline panel members at the first meeting.
The materials included full-text
hard copy and/or electronic versions
of the articles or the listings with abstracts (if available) of the
searches for randomized trials and original research. This material was
supplemented with targeted searches to ad- dress specific needs identified in writing the guideline
and specific statements of recommendation.
Targeted searches. From the set of 741 articles, key words
from each “bold-faced statement” were used to refine
the literature search. For example; from the statement “MEDICAL
THERAPY: Clinicians should
not routinely treat
BPPV with vestibular suppressant medications such as antihista- mines or
benzodiazepines,” the target search strategy would
combine “BPPV OR Benign Paroxysmal Position Vertigo” search terms
with pharmaco* OR drug therapy OR drug* OR medical OR side effect* OR
vestibular suppressant OR suppressant, and so on.
Assessment of Implementability
During the 10 months devoted to guideline development ending in August 2008, the group met twice and participated in three conference calls
with interval electronic review and feedback on each guideline draft to ensure
accuracy of content and consistency with standardized criteria for re- porting
clinical practice guidelines. AAO-HNS staff, with guidance from the Yale Center
for Medical Informatics, used the GuideLine
Implementability Appraisal (GLIA) tool to appraise adherence of the
guideline to methodolog- ical standards, to improve clarity of recommendations,
and to predict potential
obstacles to implementation.22 Panel members received summary appraisals in
June 2008 and modified an advanced
draft of the guideline. The final draft practice guideline underwent
extensive external peer re- view. Comments were compiled and reviewed by the
group chairperson. The recommendations contained in the practice
guideline are based on the best available published data through March 2008.
Where data were lacking, a combina- tion of clinical
experience and expert consensus was used. A scheduled review process will occur at 5
years from publi- cation or sooner if new compelling evidence warrants ear-
lier consideration.
Classification of Evidence-based Statements
Guidelines are intended
to reduce inappropriate variations in
clinical care, to produce optimal health outcomes
for patients, and to minimize harm. The evidence-based approach to guide-
line development requires
that the evidence supporting a policy be
identified, appraised, and summarized, and that an explicit
link between evidence and statements
be defined. Evidence- based statements reflect both the quality of evidence and
the balance of benefit and harm that
is anticipated when the
statement is followed. The definitions for
evidence-based statements23 are listed in Tables 2 and 3.
Guidelines are never intended to
supersede professional judgment; rather, they may be viewed as a relative con-
straint on individual clinician discretion in a particular clin- ical
circumstance. Less frequent variation in practice is expected for a strong
recommendation than might be ex- pected with a recommendation. Options offer
the most op- portunity for practice variability.24 Clinicians should always decide and subsequently act in a way that they believe will best serve
their patients’ interests and needs, regardless of guideline
recommendations. Guidelines
represent the best judgment of a team
of experienced
clinicians and methodologists addressing the scientific evidence for a particular
topic.23
Making recommendations about health
practices in- volves value judgments on the desirability of various out- comes
associated with management options. Values applied by the guideline panel sought to minimize harm, diminish
Guideline definitions for evidence-based statements
Statement
Definition
Implication
Strong
recommendation
A strong recommendation means the benefits of the recommended
approach clearly exceed the harms (or that the harms clearly exceed the
benefits in the case of
a strong negative recommendation)
and that the quality of the supporting evidence is excellent (grade A
or B)*. In some clearly identified circumstances, strong recommendations may be made on
the basis of lesser evidence
when high-quality evidence
is impossible to obtain and the anticipated benefits strongly
outweigh the harms.
Clinicians should follow a strong recommendation
unless a clear and
compelling rationale for an
alternative approach is present.
Recommendation A recommendation means the benefits exceed the harms (or that
the harms exceed the benefits in the case of
a negative recommendation), but
the
quality of evidence is
not as strong (grade B or C)*. In some clearly identified circumstances, recommendations may be
made on
the
basis of lesser evidence when high-quality evidence
is impossible to obtain and the
anticipated benefits outweigh the harms.
Option An option means that either the quality of evidence that exists is
suspect (grade D)* or that well-done
studies (grade A,
B, or C)*
show little clear advantage to one approach versus another.
Clinicians should also
generally follow a recommendation, but should remain alert to new information and sensitive to patient
preferences.
Clinicians should be
flexible in their decision making regarding appropriate practice, although
they may set bounds on alternatives;
patient preference should have a
substantial influencing role.
No
recommendation
No recommendation means there is both a
lack of pertinent
evidence (grade D)* and an unclear balance between benefits and harms.
Clinicians should feel
little constraint in their decision making and be alert to new published evidence
that
clarifies the balance of
benefit versus harm; patient preference should have a substantial
influencing role.
*See Table 3 for definition of
evidence grades.
unnecessary testing and
inappropriate therapy, and reduce the unnecessary use of vestibular
suppressants. The panel also strongly valued expeditious treatment with
effective therapeutic maneuvers to minimize symptomatology and quality-of-life
impact of BPPV. A major goal of the com- mittee was to be transparent and
explicit about how values were applied and to document
the process.
Financial Disclosure and
Conflicts of Interest The cost of developing this guideline, including
travel ex- penses of all panel members, was covered in full by the
AAO-HNS; there was no support or direct involvement of industry at any phase of the development process. Potential
conflicts of interest
for all panel members in the past 5 years were compiled and distributed before the first conference call. After review and
discussion of these disclosures,25 the panel concluded that individuals with potential
conflicts could remain on the panel if they 1) reminded the panel of potential conflicts
before any related discussion, 2) recused
themselves from a related discussion if asked by the panel, and 3) agreed not to discuss
any aspect of the guideline
with industry before publication. Finally, panelists were re- minded that conflicts
of interest extend beyond financial relationships, and may include
personal experiences, how a participant earns a living, and the participant’s
previously established “stake” in an issue.26
Evidence quality for grades of
evidence
Grade Evidence quality
A Well-designed randomized controlled trials or diagnostic studies performed
on a population similar to
the guideline’s target
population
B Randomized controlled trials or diagnostic
studies with minor limitations; overwhelmingly consistent evidence
from observational studies
C Observational studies
(case-control and
cohort design)
D Expert opinion,
case reports, reasoning from
first principles (bench
research or animal studies)
X Exceptional situations for which validating
studies cannot be performed and there is a clear preponderance of
benefit over harm
BPPV GUIDELINE EVIDENCE-BASED
STATEMENTS
Each evidence-based statement is
organized in a similar fashion: evidence-based
statement in boldface type, fol-
lowed by an italicized statement on the strength of the recommendation. Several
paragraphs then discuss the evi- dence base supporting the statement,
concluding with an “evidence profile”
of aggregate evidence quality, benefit- harm assessment, and statement of
costs. Where appropri- ate, specific
exclusionary criteria for patients that may be exceptions to the intended
scope or purpose
of the evidence-
based statement are listed. Finally, there is
an explicit state- ment of the value judgments, the role of patient preferences, and a repeat statement of the
strength of the recommenda- tion. An overview of evidence-based statements in
the guideline and their interrelationship is shown in Table 4.
The
role of patient
preference in clinical
decision making deserves clarification. For some statements, the evidence
base demonstrates clear benefit, which would minimize the
role of patient preference. If the evidence
is weak or benefits
are unclear, however, not all informed patients
might opt to follow the suggestion. In these cases, the practice
of shared decision making, in
which the management
decision is made collaboratively
between the clinician and the in- formed patient, becomes more useful. Factors
related to patient preference include (but are not limited to) absolute
benefits, adverse effects, costs of drugs or tests, frequency
and duration of treatment, and desire for immediate versus delayed therapy.
Comorbidity can also impact patient pref- erences by several mechanisms such as
physical comorbidi- ties precluding certain
therapeutic maneuvers.
Statement 1a. Diagnosis of
Posterior
Canal BPPV
Clinicians should diagnose
posterior semicircular canal BPPV when vertigo associated with nystagmus is
pro- voked by the Dix-Hallpike maneuver, performed by bringing the patient from
an upright to supine position with the head turned 45 degrees to one side and
neck extended 20 degrees. Strong recommendation based on diagnostic studies with minor
limitations and a preponder- ance of benefit over harm.
Posterior semicircular canal BPPV is
diagnosed when 1) patients report a history of vertigo provoked by changes in
head position relative to gravity
and 2) when, on physical
Table 4
Outline of evidence-based statements
Guideline segment
(Evidence-based statement number) Statement strength
I. Presumed benign paroxysmal positional vertigo (BBPV)
a. Diagnosis of
posterior canal BPPV (Statement
#1a)
b. Diagnosis of
lateral canal BPPV (Statement
#1b)
c. Differential diagnosis (Statement
#2a)
d.
Modifying factors (Statement #2b)
II. Diagnostic testing
a. Radiographic and vestibular testing
(Statement #3a)
b.
Audiometric testing (Statement #3b)
III. Treatment
a. Initial therapy of BPPV
i. Repositioning maneuvers as initial therapy (Statement #4a)
ii. Vestibular rehabilitation as initial therapy (Statement #4b)
iii. Observation as initial
therapy (Statement #4c)
b. Medical therapy
(Statement #5)
c. Reassessment of
treatment response (Statement #6a)
d. Evaluation of
treatment failure (Statement #6b)
e. Education (Statement
#7)
Strong recommendation Recommendation
Recommendation Recommendation
Recommendation against
No recommendation
Recommendation
Option
Option
Recommendation against Recommendation
Recommendation Recommendation
Diagnostic criteria for posterior canal
BPPV
History Patient reports repeated
episodes of vertigo with
changes in
head
position.
balance inclusiveness of
diagnosis with accuracy of diag- nosis. Given that the majority of treatment
trials and sys- tematic reviews of BPPV require
both episodic symptoms of positional vertigo noted in
the patients’ history and a positive Dix-Hallpike test, history alone is insufficient to render an accurate diagnosis
of BPPV.
Physical
examination
Each of the following criteria
are
fulfilled:
● Vertigo associated with
nystagmus is provoked by
the Dix-Hallpike test.
● There is a latency period
between the completion of the Dix-Hallpike test and the onset
of vertigo and
nystagmus.
● The provoked vertigo
and
nystagmus increase
and then resolve within a time period of 60
seconds from onset of
Physical Examination
In addition to the historical criteria for the diagnosis of
posterior canal BPPV, clinicians should confirm
the diag- nosis of posterior canal
BPPV by performing the Dix- Hallpike maneuver (Table 5, Fig 1).
The
nystagmus produced by the Dix-Hallpike maneuvers in posterior canal BPPV typically displays two
important diagnostic characteristics. First, there is a latency period between
the completion of the maneuver, and the onset of subjective rotational vertigo and the objective nystagmus.
The latency period for the onset of the nystagmus
with this
nystagmus.
examination,
characteristic nystagmus is provoked by the
Dix-Hallpike
maneuver (Table 5).
History
Vertigo has been defined
as an “illusory sensation of motion
of either the self or the surroundings.”27 The symptoms of vertigo resulting from posterior canal BPPV
are typically described by the patient as a rotational or spinning sensation
maneuver is largely unspecified
in the literature, but the panel
felt that a typical latency
period would range from 5 to 20 seconds,
although it may be as long as 1 minute
in rare cases.4 Second, the provoked subjective vertigo and the
nystagmus increase, and then resolve
within a time period of
60 seconds
from the onset of nystagmus.
The fast component of the nystagmus provoked
by the Dix-Hallpike maneuver demonstrates a characteristic mixed torsional and vertical movement
(often described as upbeat- ing-torsional), with the upper pole of the eye beating
toward the dependent ear and the vertical component
beating to-
28,39
when the patient changes head position relative to gravity.
ward the forehead (Fig
1).
Temporally,
the
rate
of
The episodes are often provoked by everyday activities
and commonly occur when rolling over in bed or when the patient is tilting the
head to look upward (eg, to place an object on a shelf higher than the head) or
bending forward (eg, to tie shoes).11,28-30
Patients with BPPV most commonly
report discrete, ep- isodic periods of vertigo lasting 1 minute or less and
often report modifications or limitations of their general
move-
ments to avoid provoking the vertiginous episodes.31 Other
nystagmus typically begins gently, increases in intensity,
and then declines in intensity as it resolves. This has been termed crescendo-decrescendo nystagmus. The nystagmus is again
commonly observed after the patient returns to the upright head position and
upon arising, but the direction of the nystagmus may be reversed.
Another classical feature of the
nystagmus associated with posterior canal BPPV is that the nystagmus typically
fatigues (a reduction in severity
of nystagmus) when the
29,39
investigators report that true “room spinning” vertigo is not
maneuver is repeated.
However, repeated performance
always present as a
reported symptom in posterior canal BPPV, with patients
alternatively complaining of lighthead-
edness, dizziness, nausea, or the feeling of being “off bal- ance.”2,11,28,32-37 Approximately 50 percent of patients also
of the Dix-Hallpike maneuver
to demonstrate fatigability is
not recommended, because it unnecessarily subjects pa- tients to
repeated symptoms of vertigo that may be discom- forting, and repeat performance may interfere with the im-
28
report subjective imbalance
between the classic episodes of
mediate bedside treatment
of BPPV.
Therefore, the panel
BPPV.11 In contrast, a history of
vertigo without associ- ated
lightheadedness may increase
the a priori likelihood of a diagnosis of
posterior canal BPPV.15 In up to one-
third of cases with
atypical histories of positional vertigo,
Dix-Hallpike testing will still
reveal positional nystag- mus, strongly suggesting
the diagnosis
of posterior
canal BPPV.37
Other authors have loosened the
historical criteria re- quired for BPPV diagnosis with coinage of the term
“sub- jective BPPV” without a positive Dix-Hallpike
test.35,38
However, in clinical
practice, there is a practical need to
did not include fatigability of the nystagmus
as a diagnostic
criterion.
Performing the
Dix-Hallpike
Diagnostic
Maneuver
The Dix-Hallpike maneuver is performed by
the clinician
moving the patient through a set of specified
head-posi- tioning maneuvers to
elicit the expected characteristic nystagmus of posterior canal BPPV (Fig 1).28,29 Before beginning
the maneuver,
the clinician
should counsel the patient regarding
the upcoming movements
and warn that

Figure
1 Diagrammatic
representation of performance of the Dix-Hallpike maneuver for the diagnosis of
posterior canal BPPV (adapted from reference 28). (A) The examiner stands at the patient’s right side and rotates the
patient’s head 45 degrees to the right to align the right posterior semicircular canal with the sagittal plane of the body. (B) The examiner moves the patient, whose eyes are open, from the seated
to the supine right-ear-down position and then extends the patient’s neck
slightly so that the chin is pointed slightly upward. The latency, duration,
and direction of nystagmus, if present, and the latency and duration of
vertigo, if present, should be noted. The arrows
in the inset depict the direction of nystagmus in patients with typical
benign paroxysmal positional vertigo. A presumed location in the labyrinth of
the free-floating debris thought
to cause the disorder is also shown.
they may
provoke a sudden onset of intense
subjective vertigo, possibly with nausea, which will subside within
60 seconds.
Because the patient is going
to be
placed in the supine position relatively
quickly with the head po-
sition slightly below the
body, the patient should be
oriented so that, in
the supine
position, the head can “hang”
with support off the posterior edge of the exam-
ination table
by about
20 degrees.
The examiner
should ensure that he can support the patient’s head and guide
the patient through the
maneuver safely and securely, without the examiner losing support or balance himself.
1. The maneuver
begins
with
the
patient
in
the
upright
seated position with the examiner
standing at the pa-
2.
The examiner rotates the patient’s head 45 degrees to the
right and, with manual
support, maintains the 45-degree head turn to the right
during the next part of
the maneuver.
3.
Next, the examiner
fairly quickly moves the patient
(who is instructed to keep the eyes open) from the seated to the
supine right-ear down position and then extends the patient’s neck slightly
(approximately 20 degrees below the horizontal plane) so that the patient’s
chin is pointed slightly upward, with the head hanging off the edge of
the examining table and supported by the examiner. The examiner observes the
patient’s eyes for the latency, duration, and direction of the nystagmus.40,41 Again,
the provoked nystagmus in posterior canal BPPV is classi-
cally described as a mixed torsional and vertical move-
Factors that may affect the diagnostic
accuracy of the Dix-Hallpike maneuver include the speed of movements during the test, time of day, and the angle of the plane of the occiput during the maneuver.38 The Dix-Hallpike test must be done bilaterally to determine
which ear is involved or if both ears are involved.38 In a small percent of cases, the Dix-Hallpike maneuver may be
bilaterally positive (ie, the correspondingly appropriate nystagmus is elicited
for each ear in the dependent position). For example, bilateral pos- terior
canal BPPV is more likely to be encountered after head trauma.2
Although
the Dix-Hallpike maneuver
is the test of choice to confirm the diagnosis
of posterior canal BPPV, it should
be avoided in certain circumstances. Although there are no documented reports
of vertebrobasilar insufficiency pro- voked by performing the Dix-Hallpike maneuver, clinicians
should be careful to consider the risk of stroke or vascular
48
ment with the upper pole of the eye beating
toward the
injury in patients
with significant vascular
disease.
Care
dependent ear (in this example the right ear). The
patient should also be queried as to the presence of subjective vertigo.
4.
After resolution of the subjective
vertigo and the nystag-
mus, if present, the patient may be slowly returned to the upright position.
During the return to the upright posi- tion, a reversal of the nystagmus may be
observed and should be allowed
to resolve.
5.
The Dix-Hallpike maneuver
(steps 1-4) should then be repeated for the left side, with the
left ear arriving at the dependent position.38 Again, the examiner should in- quire about subjective vertigo
and identify objective nys- tagmus, when present. The examination of the left side
completes the test.
The Dix-Hallpike maneuver is
considered the gold stan- dard test for the diagnosis of posterior canal BPPV.19 It is the most common diagnostic criterion
required for entry into clinical trials and for
inclusion of such trials in meta- analyses.42,43 The
lack of an alternative external gold stan- dard to the Dix Hallpike maneuver
limits the availability of rigorous sensitivity and specificity data. Although it is con- sidered the
gold standard test for posterior
canal BPPV diagnosis, its
accuracy may differ between specialty and nonspecialty clinicians.
Lopez-Escamez et al44 have re-
ported a
sensitivity of 82
percent and specificity
of 71 percent for the
Dix-Hallpike maneuvers in posterior canal BPPV, primarily among specialty
clinicians. In the primary care setting, Hanley and O’Dowd45 have reported a positive predictive value for a positive
Dix-Hallpike test of 83 per- cent and a negative predictive value of 52 percent
for the diagnosis of BPPV. Therefore, a negative Dix-Hallpike ma- neuver does
not necessarily rule out a diagnosis of posterior canal BPPV. Because of the
lower negative predictive val- ues of the Dix-Hallpike maneuver,
it has been suggested that
this maneuver may need to be repeated at a separate visit to confirm
the diagnosis and avoid a false-negative
result.38,46,47
should also be exercised
in patients with cervical stenosis,
severe kyphoscoliosis, limited cervical range of motion, Down syndrome,
severe rheumatoid arthritis, cervical radicu-
lopathies, Paget’s disease, ankylosing
spondylitis, low back dysfunction, spinal cord
injuries, and morbid obesity.30,48 Pa- tients who are obese may be difficult for a single examiner
to fully support throughout the maneuver, so additional assistance may be
required. For patients with physical lim- itations, special tilting examination tables may allow
the safe performance of the Dix-Hallpike maneuver.
Evidence Profile
● Aggregate evidence
quality: Grade B, based on diagnos-
tic studies with minor limitations
● Benefit: improved
diagnostic accuracy and efficiency
● Harm: risk of provoking
temporary symptoms of BPPV
● Cost: minimal
● Benefit-harm assessment: preponderance of benefit over
harm
● Value judgments: conclusion that paroxysmal positional nystagmus induced by the Dix-Hallpike maneuver con-
firms the diagnosis of BPPV and is the gold standard test for diagnosis (The panel emphasized
that a history of positional vertigo alone should not be relied upon for the
diagnosis of posterior canal BPPV.)
● Role of patient preferences: minimal
● Patient exclusions: patients with physical limitations in- cluding cervical stenosis, severe
kyphoscoliosis, limited cervical range of motion, Down syndrome, severe rheu-
matoid arthritis, cervical radiculopathies, Paget’s disease, ankylosing spondylitis,
low back dysfunction, spinal cord injuries, and morbid obesity
● Policy level: strong recommendation
Statement 1b. Diagnosis of
Lateral
Canal BPPV
If the patient has a history
compatible with BPPV and
the Dix-Hallpike test is negative,
the clinician should
perform a supine roll test to assess for lateral semicir- cular canal
BPPV. Recommendation based on diagnostic studies with limitations and a preponderance of benefit over harm.
Lateral canal
BPPV (also called horizontal canal BPPV) is the second most common type of BPPV.49-51 Because this type
of BPPV has received considerably less attention in the
literature, clinicians may be relatively unaware of its exis- tence and the
appropriate diagnostic maneuvers for lateral canal BPPV. Patients with a
history compatible with BPPV (ie, repeated episodes of vertigo produced by
changes in head position relative to gravity) who do not meet diagnos- tic
criteria for posterior canal BPPV should be investigated for lateral canal
BPPV. In many instances, the presenting symptoms of lateral canal BPPV are
indistinguishable from posterior canal BPP.50
Several studies have cited an incidence
of approximately
10 to 15 percent in populations referred for evaluation
and treatment of BPPV.5,6,52-54 Furthermore, lateral
canal BPPV may occur following performance of the PRMs (eg,
Epley maneuver) for an initial diagnosis of posterior canal BPPV. This
transition from posterior canal BPPV to lateral canal BPPV is thought to occur as free-floating
particulate mate- rial migrates
from the posterior
canal to the lateral canal (so-called canal switch). Because
this type of transition is relatively
common, clinicians should be aware of lateral canal BPPV and its diagnosis.5
The
supine roll test is the preferred maneuver
to diagnose lateral canal BPPV.6,51,55 Clinicians should inform the pa-
tient that this test is a provocative maneuver and may cause
the patient to become subjectively intensely dizzy for a
short period of time. The supine roll test is performed by initially
positioning the patient supine with the head in neutral position followed by
quickly rotating the head 90 degrees to one side with the clinician
observing the patient’s eyes for nystagmus (Fig 2). After the nystagmus
subsides (or if no nystagmus is elicited), the head is then returned to
the straight faceup supine position. After any additional elicited nystagmus
has subsided, the head is then quickly turned
90 degrees to the opposite
side, and the eyes are once
again observed for nystagmus. Two potential nystagmus findings may occur with this maneuver,
reflecting two types of
lateral canal BPPV.5,55,56
● Geotropic type: In most cases of lateral canal BPPV,
rotation to the pathological side causes a very intense horizontal nystagmus
beating toward the undermost (af- fected) ear, known as geotropic
nystagmus (ie, nystagmus with a fast component toward the
ground). When the patient is rolled to the other, healthy side, there is a less
intense horizontal nystagmus, again beating toward the undermost ear (again
geotropic; the direction of the nys- tagmus has now changed).
● Apogeotropic type: In less common cases,
performance of the roll test results in a horizontal nystagmus beating
toward the uppermost ear (apogeotropic nystagmus). Upon rolling to the opposite
side, the nystagmus will change direction, again beating toward the uppermost
ear.
In both types
of lateral canal
BPPV, the affected
ear is presumed to be the ear to which the side of rotation pro-

Figure
2 Diagrammatic views
of the supine roll test.
(1) The patient is in the starting neutral
position. The patient’s head is turned
rapidly to the right side (2) to examine for characteristic nystagmus. Then the head is returned
to the face-up position (1), allowing
all nystagmus to subside,
and then turned rapidly to the left side (3) to examine once again for nystagmus. (Adapted
from reference 19.)
The supine roll test has not received
as much widespread use or diagnostic validation as the Dix-Hallpike maneuver.
Review of the literature reveals that the sensitivity and specificity of the supine roll test in the diagnosis
of lateral canal BPPV have not
been determined. The lack of a more accurate, commonly accepted (gold standard)
test for the diagnosis of lateral
canal BPPV may be responsible, in part, for the absence of
data for these statistical measures. A positive supine roll test, however, is
the most commonly required and consistent diagnostic entry criterion for thera-
peutic trials of lateral canal BPPV.50,53
Reports of harm or patient injury from the performance
of the supine roll test were not identified
in the literature review, although many authors simply stated that
patients who could not tolerate positional maneuvers were excluded from the
population under study. Care should also be exer- cised in patients with
cervical stenosis, severe kyphoscolio- sis,
limited cervical range of motion,
Down syndrome, severe rheumatoid
arthritis, cervical radiculopathies,
Paget’s disease, ankylosing spondylitis, low back dysfunction, spinal
cord injuries, and morbid obesity.30,48 The benefit
of performing the supine roll test is that it allows clinicians to confirm
a diagnosis of lateral canal BPPV quickly and efficiently.5,19
It also allows clinicians to more accurately and
comprehen- sively diagnose positional vertigo that is not due to the posterior canal,
whereas without supine
roll testing, patients with lateral canal BPPV might be
diagnostically missed if only traditional Dix-Hallpike testing was done.
Further ben- efit might be derived from the supine roll test by decreasing
the need to perform potentially unnecessary or unhelpful diagnostic testing.
Evidence Profile
● Aggregate evidence
quality: Grade C, based on observa-
tional studies with limitations and selected populations
● Benefit:
avoidance of a false-negative result in the diag-
nosis of BPPV attributable to a missed lateral canal vari- ant; allowance
of confirmation of a diagnosis of lateral
canal BPPV, thereby avoiding unnecessary diagnostic tests.
● Harm: risk of provoking
temporary symptoms of BPPV
● Cost: minimal
● Benefit-harm assessment: preponderance of benefit over
harm
● Value judgments: the importance of evaluating additional variants of
BPPV rather than limiting the evaluation to posterior canal BPPV
● Role of patient preferences: minimal
● Exclusions: patients
with physical limitations including cervical stenosis, severe kyphoscoliosis, limited
cervical range of motion, Down syndrome, severe rheumatoid arthritis, cervical
radiculopathies, Paget’s disease,
morbid obesity, ankylosing spondylitis,
low back dysfunction, and spinal cord injuries
● Policy level: recommendation
2a. Differential Diagnosis of BPPV
Clinicians should
differentiate BPPV from other causes of imbalance, dizziness, and vertigo. Recommendation based on
observational studies and a preponderance of benefit over harm.
Despite being the most common cause
of peripheral vertigo,59 BPPV is still often underdiagnosed or misdiag- nosed.60 Other causes of vertigo that may be confused with BPPV can
be divided into
otological, neurological, and other entities. In a nonspecialty setting
evaluation of pa- tients presenting with vertigo, BPPV has been found to
account for 42 percent of cases followed by vestibular neuritis (41%),
Ménière’s disease (10%), vascular causes (3%), and other causes (3%).45 In subspecialty settings, Ménière’s disease may predominate
(43% of cases), fol- lowed by BPPV (23%) and vestibular neuritis (26%).61 The most common diagnoses
that require distinction from BPPV are listed
in Table 6. These conditions require distinction from BPPV
because their natural history, treatment, and potential for serious medical
sequelae differ significantly.
Otological Disorders
Other otological disorders causing vertigo may be differen- tiated
from BPPV by their clinical characteristics including their temporal pattern
and the presence or absence of hear- ing loss. Whereas BPPV is characterized by
acute, discrete episodes of brief positional vertigo without associated hear-
ing loss, other otological causes of vertigo
manifest differ-

|
||||||||||
Table 6
ent
temporal patterns and may additionally demonstrate associated hearing
loss.61
In distinction to BPPV, Ménière’s
disease is character- ized by discrete
episodic attacks, with each attack
exhibiting a characteristic triad of sustained
vertigo, fluctuating hear- ing
loss, and tinnitus.4,62 As opposed to BPPV, the duration of vertigo in
an episode of Ménière’s disease typically lasts longer (usually on the order of
hours) and is typically more disabling owing to both severity and duration. In
addition, an associated contemporaneous decline in sensorineural hearing is
required for the diagnosis of a Ménière’s attack, whereas acute
hearing loss should
not occur with an episode of BPPV.63 Protracted nausea and vomiting are also more common during an attack of Ménière’s
disease.
Acute peripheral vestibular
dysfunction syndromes, such as vestibular neuritis or labyrinthitis, present
with sudden, unanticipated, severe vertigo with a subjective sensation of
rotational (room spinning)
motion. If the auditory portion
of the inner ear is affected, hearing loss and tinnitus may also result.64 These
syndromes are commonly
preceded by a viral prodrome. The time course of the
vertigo is often the best differentiator between BPPV and vestibular neuritis
or labyrinthitis. In vestibular neuritis or labyrinthitis, the ver- tigo is of
gradual onset, developing over several hours, followed by a sustained level of
vertigo lasting days to weeks.61,65,66 The vertigo
is present at rest (not requiring
positional change for its onset), but it may be subjectively exacerbated by
positional changes. These acute peripheral vestibular syndromes may also be
accompanied by severe levels of nausea, vomiting, sweating, and pallor, which
are also typically sustained
along with the vertigo.
Superior canal dehiscence syndrome
(SCD) is clinically characterized by attacks of vertigo and oscillopsia (the
sen- sation that viewed
objects are moving
or wavering back and forth) often brought on by loud
sounds, Valsalva maneu- vers, or pressure
changes of the external auditory
canals.67
Similar to perilymphatic fistula, it differs
from BPPV in that
vertigo is induced by pressure changes and not position changes. SCD may also
present with an associated conduc- tive hearing loss and is diagnosed through
CT of the tem- poral bones.68
Posttraumatic vertigo can present
with a variety of clin- ical manifestations including vertigo, disequilibrium,
tinni- tus, and headache.69 Although BPPV is most often idio-
pathic, in specific cases, traumatic
brain injury is associated
with BPPV.70 BPPV has been described as occurring in conjunction with or as a sequelae to
other vestibular disor- ders as well, such as Ménière’s disease and vestibular
neu- ritis.71 Therefore, clinicians must consider the
possibility of more than one vestibular disorder being present in any patient who does not clearly have the specific
symptoms of a single vestibular entity.
Neurological Disorders
One of the key issues facing clinicians attempting to
diag- nose the etiology for vertigo is the differentiation between peripheral causes of vertigo (those causes arising from the
ear or vestibular apparatus) and CNS causes of vertigo. Although at times this distinction may be difficult, several clinical features
may suggest a
central cause of
vertigo rather than BPPV.72,73 Nystagmus findings
that more strongly suggest
a neurological cause for vertigo,
rather than a peripheral cause
such as BPPV, include down-beating nystagmus on the Dix-Hallpike maneuver,
direction-chang- ing nystagmus occurring without changes in head position (ie,
periodic alternating nystagmus), or baseline nystagmus manifesting without
provocative maneuvers. Among the central causes of vertigo that should be
distinguished from BPPV are migraine-associated vertigo, vertebrobasilar in-
sufficiency, and intracranial tumors.
Migraine-associated vertigo has been
described as a common cause of vertigo in the adult population74 and may account for as many as 14 percent
of cases of vertigo.61
Diagnostic criteria
include 1) episodic
vestibular symptoms;
2) migraine according to International Headache Society criteria; 3)
at least two of the following migraine symptoms during at least two vertiginous
episodes: migrainous head- ache, photophobia, phonophobia, or visual or other aura; and 4) other causes ruled out by
appropriate investiga- tions.75 Migraine-associated vertigo is heterogeneous in that
both central disorders and peripheral disorders have been described, although
more often it is believed to be central in nature.76,77 It
is distinguishable from BPPV by virtue of the necessary migraine/headache
components, which are not associated with classic
BPPV.
Several reports have suggested that isolated
attacks of vertigo can be the initial and
only symptom of vertebrobasi- lar insufficiency.78-80 Isolated transient vertigo may precede a stroke in the
vertebrobasilar artery by weeks or months. The
attacks of vertigo in vertebrobasilar insufficiency usu- ally last less then 30 minutes and have no associated hearing loss. The type of nystagmus
(typically gaze-evoked in cen- tral lesions), the severity of postural
instability, and the presence of additional neurological signs are the main
dis- tinguishing features between vertebrobasilar insufficiency and BPPV.81 In addition, the nystagmus arising in vertebro- basilar insufficiency does not fatigue and is not easily sup- pressed by gaze fixation, helping to separate this diagnosis
from BPPV.
Intracranial tumors and other brain stem
lesions may rarely present with a history and symptomatology similar to those
of BPPV.82 In these cases, associated symptoms such as
tinnitus, aural fullness, new-onset hearing loss, and/or other neurological
symptoms should help differentiate these diagnoses from BPPV. Atypical
nystagmus during Dix- Hallpike testing (eg, sustained down-beating nystagmus)
argues against BPPV and suggests a more serious cause. Finally, failure
to respond to conservative management such as the PRM or vestibular rehabilitation should raise
concern that the underlying diagnosis may not be BPPV.82
Other Disorders
Several other non-otological and non-neurological disorders may present similarly to BPPV. Patients
with panic disor-
Cervical vertigo has been described
as vertigo arising in conjunction with degenerative cervical spine disease.85 Cer- vical vertigo may produce symptoms similar to those of
BPPV owing to proprioceptive abnormalities arising from cervical spine
dysfunction.86 Symptoms of cervical vertigo may be triggered by rotation of the head relative to the body while in an upright posture (as
opposed to vertigo triggered by changes in head position relative to gravity).
Postural hypotension also may produce episodic
dizziness or vertigo. The dizziness or vertigo
in postural hypotension, however, is provoked by moving from the supine to the upright
position in distinction to the provocative positional changes of BPPV.
Although the differential diagnosis
of BPPV is vast, most of these other disorders can be
further distinguished from BPPV on the basis of responses to the Dix-Hallpike
maneu- ver and the supine roll test. Clinicians should still remain alert for
concurrent diagnoses accompanying BPPV, espe- cially in patients with a mixed clinical presentation.
Evidence Profile
● Aggregate evidence quality:
Grade C, based on observa- tional studies with limitations
● Benefit: prevention of false-positive diagnosis
of BPPV
when another condition
actually exists
● Harm: none
● Cost: minimal
● Benefit-harm assessment: preponderance of benefit over harm
● Value judgments: none
● Role of patient preferences: minimal
● Policy level: recommendation
Statement 2b. Modifying Factors
Clinicians should
question patients with BPPV for fac- tors that modify management including
impaired mo- bility or balance,
CNS disorders, a lack of home support, and increased risk for falling. Recommendation based on
observational and cross-sectional studies and a preponder- ance of benefit over harm.
Although BPPV arises from dysfunction of the vestibular end organ, patients with BPPV
often concurrently suffer from comorbidities, limitations, and risks that may affect the diagnosis and treatment outcome
of BPPV. Assessment of the patient with BPPV for factors that modify manage-
ment is
essential
for
improved
treatment
outcomes
and
ensuring patient safety with an underlying diagnosis of BPPV. The
majority of factors that may modify manage- ment of BPPV can be identified if the clinician questions patients for these factors
and elicits a detailed history.87
Given that BPPV occurs most commonly in the
second half of the lifespan and its prevalence increases with age, patients
suffering from BPPV often have medical comor- bidities that may alter the management of BPPV.16 In cross-
sectional surveys, patients with BPPV demonstrate higher rates of diabetes, history
of head trauma, and anxiety.88
Other studies have also found higher relative rates of mi- graine
(34% in BPPV patients vs 10% in non-dizziness control group), history of stroke (10% in BPPV patients vs
1% in controls), diabetes (14% vs 5%), and hypertension
(52% vs 22%).11 Clinicians should assess patients with BPPV for
these comorbidities because their presence may modify management and influence treatment outcomes in BPPV.
One of the major concerns with BPPV and
vertiginous syndromes in general is the risk for falls and resultant injury.89 In multiple studies
concerning etiology of falls,
dizziness and vertigo were deemed
the primary
etiology for 13 percent of falls, compared with existing balance
and gait problems (17%)
and person-environment
inter- actions (31%).90 In a study by Oghalai,15 9 percent of patients referred to a geriatric clinic for
general geriatric evaluation had undiagnosed BPPV, and three-fourths of those
with BPPV had fallen within the 3 months prior to referral. Thus, evaluation of
patients with a diagnosis of BPPV should also include an assessment of risk for falls.16
In particular, elderly
patients will be more statistically at risk for falls with BPPV. Clinicians may use various fall
assessment tools to determine the patient’s fall risk and appropriate precautionary recommendations.87
As noted above, comorbid conditions that
occur com- monly with BPPV such as a history of stroke or diabetes should also be identified during evaluation of patients with BPPV. Patients with a history of
stroke or a history of diabetes, particularly with peripheral neuropathy, may
al- ready have preexisting gait, balance, or proprioceptive def- icit.91-93 The additional symptoms of BPPV may increase their risk for fall and injury.
Patients with visual distur- bances often lack the ability
to correct for or compensate for a balance deficit with visual
cues, and may
also be at increased
risk for falls. Associations between
osteopenia and osteoporosis and BPPV have been reported.94 Patients with both osteoporosis and BPPV may be at greater
risk for fractures resulting from falls related to BPPV; therefore, patients
with combined osteoporosis and subsequent BPPV should be
identified and monitored
closely for fall
and fracture risk. Examined from a different vantage point, patients
with a history of recurrent falls, particularly among the elderly, should be
assessed for underlying BPPV as one of the potential
fall-precipitating diagnoses.95
BPPV may occur in the setting of other CNS
disorders. Patients should be questioned as to the presence of preex-
isting CNS disorders that may
modify the management of BPPV. BPPV may occur relatively commonly after trauma
or traumatic brain injury.2,96 Posttraumatic
BPPV is most likely to involve the posterior semicircular canal, and
stud- ies indicate that posttraumatic BPPV is significantly more likely to require
repeated physical treatments (up to 67% of cases) for resolution compared with
nontraumatic forms (14% of cases).97 In rare instances, posttraumatic BPPV
may be
bilateral.2 Because
posttraumatic BPPV may be
more refractory and/or bilateral, thus requiring specialized treatment, a
history of head trauma preceding a clinical diagnosis of BPPV should be
elicited.96 Although dizziness in the setting of multiple
sclerosis may have a wide variety of etiologies, studies of acute vertigo
occurring in multiple sclerosis report that a substantial number of patients
may have BPPV with a positive Dix-Hallpike maneuver and successful response to
a PRM.98,99 This
study suggests that patients with BPPV and an underlying CNS disorder may be
successfully diagnosed and treated with conventional meth- ods for BPPV.
Finally, in a small percentage of
cases, refractory or persistent BPPV may create difficulties from a psycholog- ical
and/or social-functional perspective for affected indi- viduals.100,101 Outcomes studies have shown that patients
with BPPV exhibit a significant negative quality-of-life im- pact from the diagnosis compared with
the normative pop- ulation in multiple
subscales of the Short Form-36.101,102
Patients who have preexisting comorbid conditions may
require additional home supervision in the setting of BPPV.30 This supervision may include counseling about the risk of
falling at home or a home safety assessment. In rare cases, patients disabled
by BPPV-related vertigo, especially if chronic or refractory, may need home
assistance or tem- porary nursing home placement for their safety.
Evidence Profile
● Aggregate evidence
quality: Grade C, based on observa-
tional and cross-sectional studies
● Benefit: allowance
for global management
of patients with BPPV with appropriately
structured comprehensive treatment plan; identification of patients at risk for falls and
prevention of fall-related injury
● Harm: none
● Cost: none
● Benefit-harm assessment: preponderance of benefit over
harm
● Value judgments: the management of BPPV will benefit
from assessment of these modifying
factors
● Role of patient preferences: minimal
● Policy level: recommendation
Statement 3a. Radiographic and
Vestibular
Testing
Clinicians should
not obtain radiographic imaging, ves- tibular testing, or either in a patient
diagnosed with BPPV, unless the diagnosis is uncertain or there are
additional symptoms or
signs unrelated to BPPV that warrant testing. Recommendation against based on diag- nostic studies
with limitations and a preponderance of ben- efit over harm.
The diagnosis of BPPV is based on the
clinical history and physical examination. Routine radiographic imaging or
vestibular testing is unnecessary in patients who already meet clinical
criteria for the diagnosis of BPPV (Table 5). Further radiographic or vestibular testing
may have a role in the diagnosis if the clinical
presentation is felt to be atypical,
if Dix-Hallpike testing elicits equivocal or unusual nystag- mus findings, or if additional symptoms aside from those
attributable to BPPV are present, suggesting an accompa- nying modifying
CNS or otological disorder.
Radiographic Imaging
Radiographic imaging, most commonly CNS imaging using magnetic resonance or CT
techniques, is commonly ob- tained in the evaluation of a primary symptom
complaint of vertigo. However, imaging is not useful in the routine di- agnosis
of BPPV because there are no radiological findings characteristic of or
diagnostic for BPPV.103,104 The lack of characteristic findings is likely due to fact that the pathology
presumed to occur in BPPV within the semicircular canals occurs at a microscopic level that is beyond the resolution of current neuroimaging techniques.8 On a broader
scale, pre- vious
retrospective reviews of elderly patients with dizzi- ness failed to detect any significant differences in cranial
MRI findings when comparing
dizzy versus non-dizzy
pa- tients.105,106
Radiographic imaging of the CNS should
be reserved for patients who present with a clinical
history compatible with BPPV but who also demonstrate additional neurological
symptoms atypical for BPPV. Radiographic imaging may also be considered for
patients with suspected BPPV but inconclusive positional testing, or in
patients with other neurological signs on physical examination that are not
typically associated with BPPV. Such symptoms include abnormal cranial nerve findings, visual disturbances, and severe
headache, among others. It should be noted that intracranial lesions
causing vertigo are rare.3 Potential le-
sions causing vertigo identifiable on CNS imaging include cerebrovascular disease,
demyelinating disease, or an intra- cranial mass; they are most often located
in the brain stem cerebellum, thalamus, or cortex.3 In small case series, po- sitional vertigo and nystagmus have
been associated with neurovascular compression of cranial nerve VIII,
vestibular schwannoma, Arnold Chiari malformation, and a variety of cerebellar disorders.107-109
In
distinction to standard
BPPV, such conditions
are quite rare and typically present with additional neurological
symptoms in conjunction with the vertigo. Routine neuro- imaging has not been
recommended to discern these con- ditions from the more common causes of vertigo.110 The costs of routine imaging in cases of BPPV
are not justified given that diagnostic neuroimaging does not improve the
diagnostic accuracy in the vast majority of BPPV cases.
Vestibular
Function Testing
When patients meet clinical
criteria for the diagnosis of BPPV (Table 5), no additional diagnostic benefit is obtained
from vestibular function testing. Vestibular function testing is indicated when the diagnosis of a vertiginous or dizziness
syndrome is unclear or possibly when the patient remains symptomatic following
treatment. It may also be beneficial when multiple concurrent peripheral vestibular disorders are suspected.4,65,111
Vestibular function testing involves
a battery of special- ized tests that primarily record nystagmus in response to
labyrinthine stimulation and/or voluntary eye movements. Most vestibular function
testing relies on the neurological relationship between the regulation of eye movement
and the balance organs: the vestibular-ocular reflex. These tests are useful in the evaluation of
vestibular disorders that may not be evident
from the history
and clinical examination, and may provide information for quantification,
prognosti- cation, and treatment
planning.112
The components of the vestibular
function test battery identify abnormalities in ocular motility as well as deficits in labyrinthine response to
position change, caloric stimu- lation, rotational movement, and static positions (sitting and
supine). Caloric testing is an established, widely accepted technique that is
particularly useful in determining unilat- eral vestibular hypofunction. Rotational chair testing is con-
sidered the most sensitive and reliable technique for quan- tifying the
magnitude of bilateral peripheral vestibular hypofunction.113 Some or all of these test elements may be included in a vestibular test battery.
In
cases of BPPV in which the nystagmus
findings are suggestive but not clear, it may be beneficial to use video- oculographic recordings of
nystagmus associated with pos- terior canal BPPV, because the eye can be
enlarged on a screen for detail, and the image may be replayed for further
study or second opinion. In a small percentage of cases, patients with a
history of positional vertigo but unclear nystagmus findings may undergo vestibular function test- ing. Among
complex patients referred
for subspecialty eval- uation of BPPV, such atypical or
unclear nystagmus find- ings may approach 13 percent in patients with diagnoses
suspicious for BPPV.114
BPPV is relatively frequently
associated with additional vestibular pathology. Symptoms associated with
chronic vestibular function may persist following appropriate treat- ment for
BPPV, even if the treatment is effective in resolv- ing the specific complaint of positional vertigo. For exam- ple, in highly selected subsets of
patients referred for subspecialty evaluation of BPPV, additional otopathology
and/or vestibulopathy has been identified in 31 to 53 percent of BPPV patients.4,115,116 This percentage, however, is higher than what
might be expected in the nonspecialty population. Vestibular disorders that
have been associated with BPPV include Ménière’s disease, viral vestibular
neu-
ritis, or labyrinthitis.71,117 Vestibular function testing
may be obtained when these additional diagnoses are suspected on the
basis of signs or symptoms in addition to those of BPPV.
In
patients with vestibular
pathology in addition
to BPPV, PRMs appear
to be equally effective in resolving the positional nystagmus associated with
BPPV, but complete symptom resolution is significantly
less likely in those pa- tients with additional vestibular
pathology. In one study, 86 percent of patients with BPPV but without
associated ves- tibular pathology reported
complete resolution of symptoms
after PRMs versus only 37
percent reporting complete resolu- tion when additional
vestibular pathology was
present.118
Thus, patients with suspected associated vestibular pathol- ogy in addition to BPPV may be a subset who would benefit from the additional information
obtained from vestibular function testing. Similarly, up to 25 percent of
patients with separate recurrences of BPPV are more likely to have as- sociated
vestibular pathology119; therefore,
patients with recurrent BPPV may be candidates for vestibular function testing.
In summary, patients with a clinical diagnosis
of BPPV according to guideline criteria should not routinely undergo vestibular
function testing, because the information pro- vided from such testing
adds little to the diagnostic accuracy in these cases, vestibular testing adds significant cost to the diagnosis and management of BPPV, and
the information obtained does not
alter the subsequent
management of BPPV in the vast
majority of the cases. Therefore, vestib- ular function testing should not be
routinely obtained when the diagnosis of BPPV has already been confirmed by clin-
ical diagnostic criteria. Vestibular function testing, how- ever, may be
warranted in patients with 1) atypical nystag- mus, 2)
suspected additional vestibular
pathology, 3) a failed (or repeatedly failed) response to
CRP, or 4) frequent recurrences of BPPV.120,121
Evidence Profile
● Aggregate evidence
quality: Grade C, based on diagnos-
tic studies with limitations in referred patient populations and observational
studies for vestibular testing; Grade C, based
on observational studies
for radiographic imaging
● Benefit: facilitation of prompt treatment by avoiding un- necessary testing associated with low
yield and potential false-positive diagnoses; avoidance of radiation exposure
and adverse reactions to testing
● Harm: potential missed
diagnosis of comorbid
conditions; discomfort such as nausea and vomiting produced by
vestibular testing
● Cost: cost savings associated with decreased testing
● Benefit-harm assessment: preponderance of benefit over
harm
● Value judgments:
importance of reducing unnecessary testing and delays in diagnosis
● Role of patient preferences: minimal
● Exclusions:
patients who have separate indications for radiographic or vestibular testing aside from confirmation
of a
diagnosis of BPPV
● Policy level: recommendation against
Statement
3b. Audiometric Testing
No recommendation is made concerning audiometric testing in patients
diagnosed with BPPV. No recommen- dation based on insufficient evidence for the diagnostic
or prognostic value of audiometry in the evaluation of BPPV.
Audiometry is the most commonly obtained
objective test of hearing. Recent Medicare data indicate that approx-
imately 9 percent of audiograms obtained annually are or- dered in association
with diagnostic categories related to vertigo
(International Classification
of Diseases, Version 9 codes: 386 and/or 780.4).122 Specialty clinicians with access
to audiometry frequently obtain audiometry as part of the evaluation of vertigo
in contradistinction to nonspecialty clinicians. However, limited diagnostic
cohort studies and cost-effectiveness studies supporting this practice are
avail- able.
Audiometry is not required to
diagnose BPPV; however, audiometry may offer
some diagnostic benefit
for patients in whom the clinical diagnosis of BPPV is
unclear. Both hear- ing loss and BPPV are more prevalent in older patients.
Therefore, BPPV and some degree of hearing loss (likely long-standing, as in
presbyacousis) are likely to coexist in patients with BPPV.123 From a pathophysiological stand- point, a preexisting, stable hearing loss should be
unrelated to and not influence
the diagnosis of BPPV. In such cases, routine audiometry is unlikely to reinforce
or influence the diagnosis of BPPV.
In the majority of cohort studies of
BPPV, audiometric studies, when obtained, have been largely normal. In some of
these studies, however, the inclusion criteria for a diag- nosis of BPPV
included no history of antecedent hearing loss.124 In two algorithmic studies, audiometry was found to be cost-effective and diagnostically
effective in the broad evaluation of patients
with vertigo.61,111 In a study of 192 patients referred to an academic
center for the evaluation of vertigo, Stewart et al125 found that the audiogram was the
most cost-effective test among various studies including electronystagmography,
posturography, MRI, and blood tests. Notably, however, the cost-effectiveness
(diagnostic benefit) of the history and physical examination (ie, Dix-
Hallpike maneuver or
supine role test)
was not directly studied. This diagnostic focus
notably differs from the cur- rent guideline, which emphasizes the value of the
clinical history and physical
examination.
In a study of 564 cases, Kentala et al66 found in a
diagnostic algorithm analysis that the presence of a
normal audiogram was corroborating for a diagnosis of BPPV, distinguishing BPPV
from other associated conditions such as Ménière’s disease, vestibular
schwannoma, and so on. However, the panel felt that distinction from such associated conditions could be made
accurately and more cost-effec- tively on the basis of the history,
rather than relying
on
audiometry. Upon review of the literature, no meaningful
observational or diagnostic cohort studies either supporting or arguing against
the use of audiometry in the diagnosis of the
BPPV population was identified.
Traditional BPPV should not manifest
with symptoms of a new-onset hearing loss. A newly reported hearing loss
arising in conjunction with vertigo suggests a diagnosis other than BPPV and
such patients merit audiometry. Cli- nicians should distinguish patients with
vertigo and new- onset hearing loss from those patients with preexisting oto-
logical disease who subsequently develop BPPV. As noted, studies have reported
rates of associated otological or ves- tibular pathology in 30 to 50 percent of
cases in referred populations with BPPV.4,115,116 In cases with preexisting otological disease and a
diagnostic concern for BPPV, au- diometry may help establish the independent
stability of the otological disease, thereby
helping to confirm
a diagnosis of BPPV.
Audiometry is a noninvasive test with
widespread avail- ability and no reported harms from testing. The potential
benefits of obtaining audiometry in the evaluation
of BPPV include the ability to
establish baseline stability or, alterna- tively, to help rule out other
otological conditions such as Ménière’s disease or labyrinthitis.66 The primary
disadvan- tage of routinely obtaining audiometry in patients undergo- ing evaluation for BPPV is clearly the cost to the health
care system. In the vast majority of cases of BPPV with stable hearing
by history, the audiogram is most likely to be normal or demonstrate an
age-appropriate sensorineural hearing loss and, therefore, likely will not influence
the diagnosis of BPPV. Overall, insufficient evidence exists to either
confirm or disaffirm
the value of routine audiometry in the initial assessment of BPPV.
Evidence Profile
● Aggregate evidence
quality: Grade D, based on expert
opinion specifically in the BPPV population
and an ab- sence of diagnostic studies on audiometry in BPPV
● Benefit: possible
identification of an unsuspected hearing loss or an underlying otological condition
● Harm: delay
in treatment if audiometry is not readily available
● Cost: possible realization of cost savings if fewer audio-
grams are performed
● Benefit-harm
assessment: relative balance
of benefit and harm
● Value judgments: Ease of identification of a small subset
of patients in whom audiometry might be valuable on the basis of the clinical
history
● Role of patient preferences: minimal
● Policy level: no recommendation
Statement 4a. Repositioning Maneuvers as
Initial Therapy
Clinicians should
treat
patients
with
posterior
canal
BPPV with a particle
repositioning maneuver. Recom-
Although it has
been historically
commonplace to re- assure patients diagnosed
with BPPV
that their
condition is benign and is likely
to spontaneously
remit in the subsequent months, recent
relatively high-quality evi- dence supports active, expeditious treatment with a par- ticle repositioning maneuver (PRM).
Treatment with PRMs consistently eliminates the vertigo
due to BPPV, improves quality of life, and reduces the risks of falling.
Posterior Canal BPPV Treatments
Two types of PRMs have been found
effective for posterior canal BPPV: 1) the canalith repositioning procedure
(CRP, also referred to as the Epley maneuver)
and 2) the liberatory
maneuver (also called the Semont maneuver). Other PRMs have been proposed for
the treatment of posterior canal BPPV, but high-quality, reproducible data that
demonstrate their clinical efficacies are lacking.
Treatment
with canalith repositioning procedure. CRP was first
described by Epley
in 1992.126 Through a series
of head position changes, the
CRP moves the canaliths from the posterior semicircular canal to the vestibule,
thereby reliev- ing the stimulus from the semicircular canal that had been
producing the vertigo in BPPV.
CRP is most commonly performed in the outpatient setting
by a clinician
after confirmation of the diagnosis of posterior
All but one of the RCTs for CRP has taken
place in the specialized clinic setting, most commonly with a referred
population, which may limit the generalizability of these results. In the only
RCT conducted in the primary care setting, investigators were unable to
demonstrate a signifi- cant benefit for the CRP based on symptomatic outcome.130
At 1 week follow-up, 31.6 percent (12/38) of CRP patients
demonstrated symptom resolution
versus 24.4 percent (10/
41) of sham patients (P 0.48).
Objectively, however, 34.2 percent of
CRP-treated patients converted
to a negative Dix-Hallpike at 1 week, versus 14.6
percent in the sham group (P 0.04).
Although statistically significant, this objective conversion rate is still lower than those
reported among RCTs in the specialty setting (typically ranging
from
66%-89%).42 Because both the symptomatic response rates
and conversion rates to a negative Dix-Hallpike maneuver are lower
than those reported in specialty setting RCTs, further investigation into the effectiveness of the
CRP in
the primary care setting
is warranted.
Reasons for dis- crepancy between primary care and specialty settings may
include differences in performance of the CRP (ie,
a single maneuver vs repeated maneuvers at the same visit),
intrinsic patient variability with comorbid
balance disorders, differences in symptom reporting, or
combina- tions thereof.
The positive treatment results
of the
CRP have
also been demonstrated in lesser quality
nonrandomized trials and case series.131-137 In addition to the Cochrane review,
41,138-140
canal BPPV.19 Patients should be informed that nausea, occa-
four meta-analyses
have been
reported.
Each
sional vomiting,
and/or a sense of falling may
arise during the CRP.127 Patients who previously
manifested severe nausea
and/or vomiting
with the Dix-Hallpike maneuver may be con-
analysis concluded that
the
CRP is
significantly more
effective than placebo in posterior canal BPPV. Among
these trials, however,
significant heterogeneity has also
140
sidered for antiemetic prophylaxis during the CRP.
Figure 3 depicts the CRP for posterior
canal BPPV.
Several RCTs have been published
evaluating the effi- cacy of the CRP in the treatment
of posterior canal BPPV.
A number of these are high-quality RCTs, three of which have been included in a
relatively recent Cochrane collab- orative review of the Epley maneuver for BPPV.42,59,128,129
The Cochrane review identified
a statistically significant effect in favor of the CRP
compared with controls. An odds ratio of 4.2 (95% confidence
interval, 2.0-9.1) was found in favor of treatment for subjective
symptom resolution in posterior canal BPPV; an odds ratio of 5.1 (95%
confidence interval, 2.3-11.4) was found in favor of treatment for con- version of a positive
to negative Dix-Hallpike test.
Subsequently, additional RCTs have
been published re- garding the CRP, reflecting similar
results. Table 7 summa-
rizes recent RCTs
evaluating CRP for
posterior canal BPPV. Of note,
consistent with the expected spontaneous resolution of posterior canal BPPV
over time, treatment effects between CRP and control
patients tended to diminish
over time. In the short term, typically at 1 week, the CRP is very effective
at providing symptom
resolution for posterior canal BPPV with small
numbers needed to treat (NNT).
been demonstrated.
Many trials also report a secondary outcome
of conver- sion from a positive to negative Dix-Hallpike maneuver after CRP. The odds ratios for this more objective
measure of resolution for posterior canal BPPV range from 3.2 to 22 across
studies, similar to reported rates of symptom resolu- tion.42 In most nonrandomized case series assessing treat- ment
response, symptom resolution is the only commonly reported outcome
measure for the CRP.
Considerable variability exists in terms of
the number of times the CRP is applied for the initial treatment of BPPV,
even across RCTs.59,128,129 Some
investigators perform only one
CRP cycle at the initial treatment, whereas others repeat a fixed number of cycles or perform the CRP repeat-
edly until the vertiginous symptoms extinguish or the Dix- Hallpike converts to negative.128 Even further variability exists among published case series for CRP.141-143 On the basis of a review of the literature,
it was not possible to determine the optimal number of cycles for the CRP or a
protocol for repeated procedures. The repeated application of the CRP is likely
to be determined by the severity of the symptoms, if they persist; clinician
availability; and the clinician’s historical success
with the CRP.

Figure 3 Performance of the therapeutic canalith
repositioning procedure for right-sided posterior canal BPPV. (Adapted from
reference
19.) (1) The patient is placed in the upright position with the head turned 45 degrees toward the affected ear (the ear that was positive on
the Dix-Hallpike testing). (2) The
patient is rapidly laid back to the supine head-hanging position, which is then
maintained for 20 to 30 seconds. (3) Next, the head is turned 90 degrees toward the other (unaffected) side and held for about 20 seconds.
(4) Following this rotation, the head is turned a further
90 degrees (usually
necessitating the patient’s
body to also move from the supine position to the lateral
decubitus position) such that the patient’ head is nearly in the facedown position. This position is also held for 20 to 30 seconds. (5) The patient is then brought into the upright
sitting position, completing the maneuver.
With respect to
complications of treatment, CRP is as- sociated with mild and generally
self-limiting adverse ef- fects in about
12 percent of those treated.19 Serious com-
plications from the CRP have not been identified in multiple
RCTs. The most commonly encountered complications in- clude nausea,
vomiting, fainting, and conversion to lateral
Table 7
Randomized controlled trials evaluating the effectiveness of CRP for posterior canal BPPV
|
Reference
|
Improved in treatment
group n/N
(%)
|
Improved in control
group n/N (%)
|
Endpoint
|
Time to assessment
|
P
value
|
Odds ratio
(95% CI)
|
NNT
|
|
Lynn 1995128
|
11/18 (61%)
|
3/20 (15%)
|
Vertigo resolution
|
2 weeks
|
0.033
|
6.3 (1.29-30.5)
|
2.2
|
|
Froehling 200059
|
12/24 (50%)
|
5/26 (19%)
|
Vertigo resolution
|
1-2 weeks
|
0.020
|
4.2 (1.2-14.8)
|
3.3
|
|
Simhadri 2003177
|
19/20 (95%)
|
3/20 (15%)
|
Vertigo resolution
|
1 week
|
0.001
|
107.7 (10.2-1135.5)
|
1.3
|
|
|
19/20 (95%)
|
3/20 (%)
|
|
4 weeks
|
0.001
|
107.7 (10.2-1135.5)
|
1.3
|
|
Yimtae 2003129
|
12/29 (41%)
|
1/27 (4%)
|
Vertigo resolution
|
1 week
|
0.005
|
18.4 (2.2-154.4)
|
2.7
|
|
|
16/25 (64%)
|
7/20 (35%)
|
|
4 weeks
|
0.336
|
3.3 (1.0-11.3)
|
3.4
|
|
Cohen 200543
|
*/24 (CRP)
|
*/25 (CRP)
|
Vertigo frequency
|
4 weeks†
|
0.021
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
scale (0-10)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
*/25 (LM)
|
*/25 (LM)
|
|
4 weeks†
|
0.010
|
|
|
|
von Brevern
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
2006159
|
28/35 (80%)
|
4/31 (13%)
|
Vertigo resolution
|
24 hours
|
0.001
|
27.0 (7.1-109.9)
|
1.5
|
CI, confidence interval; CRP, canalith repositioning procedure; LM, Semont’s liberatory maneuver; NNT,
number needed
to treat.
*Responses were analyzed with multilevel methods
and expressed as fitted linear regression graphs,
so no discrete numerical expression of the response rates could be determined.
†Time to evaluation was varied,
so data presented
are based on fitted linear regression
curves at 4 weeks.
canal BPPV during the course of
treatment (so-called canal switch). Such a canal switch occurs in about 6 to 7 percent
of those treated with CRP,129,144 underscoring the impor-
tance of recognizing the lateral canal variant of BPPV. Anecdotally, several
investigators have suggested that the CRP should be applied cautiously in patients with cervical
spine disease, certain vascular
conditions, retinal detach- ment, and other contraindications to its performance.145
Treatment with the liberatory
(Semont’s) maneuver. Clini- cal trials concerning the treatment effectiveness of the lib-
eratory maneuver (Fig 4) are limited. One study,43 which

Figure
4 The Semont
maneuver for right-sided BPPV. (1)
Patient is seated in the upright position; then the patient’s head is turned 45
degrees toward the left side, and the patient is then rapidly moved to the
side-lying position as depicted in position (2). This position is held for approximately 30 seconds, and then the patient is rapidly moved to the opposite side-lying position without pausing
in the sitting position and without
changing the head position relative
to the shoulder, resulting in position (3). This position
is maintained for 30 seconds
and then the patient
gradually resumes the upright sitting
position. (Adapted from reference 19.)
included a treatment arm with the
Semont maneuver, dem- onstrated
that this maneuver
improved vertigo intensity more than the sham treatment (P 0.009). A study by Salvinelli et al146 randomized 156 patients to the Semont
maneuver, flunarizine (a calcium
channel blocker), or no
treatment. At 6-month follow-up, symptom resolution oc- curred in 94.2 percent
of patients treated with the Semont maneuver, 57.7 percent of patients treated
with flunarizine, and 34.6 percent of untreated patients. Soto Varela et al147 randomized patients to treatment with CRP, Semont
maneu- ver, or Brandt-Daroff exercises. Symptom resolution among those treated with either CRP or Semont
maneuver at 1 week was the same (74% vs 71%) but only
24 percent for Brandt-Daroff exercises. At 3-month follow-up, however, patients treated
with CRP demonstrated superior outcomes
compared with those treated with Semont maneuver
(P
0.027).
In conclusion, the Semont maneuver is
more effective than no treatment or Brandt-Daroff exercises in relieving
symptoms of posterior canal BPPV, according to studies with small sample sizes
and limitations. No adverse events have been reported in trials with the
liberatory maneuver. Because of limited studies with direct comparisons between
the liberatory maneuver and the CRP, no conclusions about differential effectiveness can be drawn.
Lateral (Horizontal) Canal BPPV Treatments Lateral canal
BPPV is usually
unresponsive to CRPs used
for posterior canal BPPV but may respond
to other maneu- vers intended to move canaliths from the lateral
canal into the vestibule.144,148,149 The roll maneuver (Lempert maneu-
ver or barbecue roll maneuver) or its variations are the most commonly employed maneuvers for the treatment
of lateral canal BPPV.5,143 This maneuver
involves rolling the patient
360 degrees in a series of steps to effect particle
reposition- ing. It may be performed in the outpatient setting after a
diagnosis of lateral canal BPPV has been made with the supine roll test.
Rather limited data exist with respect
to the effectiveness of the roll maneuver in lateral canal BPPV
treatment. Based primarily on cohort
studies and case series, the effectiveness
of the roll maneuver in treating lateral canal BPPV appears to be approximately
75 percent, although reported response rates vary widely from 50 percent to
almost 100 per- cent.5,19,55,56,58,143,148-152 Because lateral canal BPPV may
spontaneously remit more quickly than other forms of BPPV, a control group is
especially important in assessing treatment efficacy.51,142
Forced prolonged positioning is
another treatment ma- neuver reported to be as effective in treating lateral
canal BPPV. It may be performed either alone or concurrently with other
maneuvers with a reported effectiveness of 75-90 percent based
on
case
series.58,150,152,153 Other
lesser-
known maneuvers such as the Gufoni maneuver and the Vannucchi-Asprella liberatory maneuver151,154,155 have
also been reported as effective
in uncontrolled studies.
In conclusion, variations of the roll
maneuver appear moderately effective and are the most widely used treat- ments
for lateral canal BPPV. Other methods of treatment have also been advocated,
but currently no RCTs provide reliable measures of effectiveness. At this time,
there is insufficient evidence to recommend
a preferred treatment maneuver for lateral canal BPPV treatment.
Self-Administration and Posttreatment
Restrictions
Three studies have
assessed patient self-treatment for BPPV. One study found slightly greater
improvement in those patients given instructions for self-administered CRP at home after initial
CRP in the office.156 Self-administered CRP appeared to be more effective (64% improvement)
than self-treatment with Brandt-Daroff exercises (23% im- provement).157 Another study reported 95 percent resolu-
tion of positional nystagmus 1 week after
self-treatment with CRP compared with 58 percent in patients who self-
treated using a modified Semont maneuver (P 0.001).158
No comparison studies have been published from which to make
recommendations regarding self-treatment vs clini- cian-administered treatment of BPPV. In motivated individ- uals, self-treatment of BPPV may be an option.
Comparison of studies, in particular
the treatment arms for RCTs, reveals similar response rates whether or not
posttreatment positional or activity restrictions (ie, cervical collar or positional avoidance) are observed.43,59,128,129,159
Two studies looking at posttreatment restrictions after CRP found no
evident improvement in those given restric- tions.160,161 Another study found slight benefit in patients
with post-activity restrictions, as measured by the number of
maneuvers required to produce a negative Dix-Hallpike maneuver.162 Overall, there is insufficient
evidence to rec- ommend post-maneuver restrictions in patients treated with
CRP.
Evidence Profile
● Aggregate evidence
quality: Grade B, based on RCTs
with small sample
sizes and significant
heterogeneity (Most studies were conducted in specialty practice set-
tings with limited data from other treatment settings, potentially limiting
generalizability of results.
● Benefit: prompt resolution of symptoms with a relatively low NNT ranging from 1 to 3
● Harm: transient provocation of symptoms of BPPV by the
maneuver; risk for falls due to imbalance after the pro- cedure; no serious adverse
events reported in RCTs
● Cost: cost of the procedure
● Benefit-harm assessment: preponderance of benefit over
harm
● Value judgments:
high value ascribed to prompt resolu-
tion of symptoms and the ease with which the CRP may be performed
● Role of patient preferences: limited
● Exclusions:
patients with physical
limitations including
cervical stenosis, Down syndrome, severe rheumatoid arthritis, cervical
radiculopathies, Paget’s disease,
morbid obesity, ankylosing spondylitis, low back dysfunction, retinal
detachment, and spinal cord injuries may not be candidates for this maneuver or
may need specialized examination tables for performance of the maneuver
● Policy level: recommendation
Statement
4b. Vestibular Rehabilitation as
Initial Therapy
The clinician may offer vestibular rehabilitation, either
self-administered or with a clinician, for the initial
treat- ment of BPPV. Option based on controlled observational
studies and a balance of benefit and harm.
Overview of Vestibular Therapy
Vestibular rehabilitation is a
form of physical therapy de- signed to promote habituation, adaptation, and
compensa- tion for deficits related to a wide variety of balance disor- ders. It may also be referred to as
vestibular habituation, vestibular exercises, or vestibular therapy. There is
no sin- gle specific protocol
for vestibular rehabilitation, but rather a program of
therapy is developed on the basis of the underlying diagnosis. Programs can
include canalith repo- sitioning exercises, adaptation exercises for gaze
stabiliza- tion, habituation exercises, substitution training for visual or somatosensory input, postural control
exercises, fall preven- tion training, relaxation
training, conditioning exercises, functional skills retraining, and patient and
family educa- tion.163-165
With respect to BPPV, vestibular rehabilitation programs
most commonly focus on habituation exercises either in
formal outpatient therapy programs or with home exercise programs. Vestibular
rehabilitation programs may also in- clude PRMs, but repositioning maneuvers
will be covered separately in the guideline. Herein, we refer to vestibular
rehabilitation as a series of exercises or training maneuvers performed by the
patient for the treatment of BPPV with or without direct clinician supervision.
Vestibular rehabilitation habituation exercises were first described by Cawthorne and Cooksey
in
the
1940s.166
These exercises consist of a series of eye, head, and
body movements in a hierarchy of increasing difficulty, which provokes vestibular
symptoms. The exercises begin with simple head movements, performed in the
sitting or supine position, and progress
to complex activities, including walk- ing
on slopes and steps with eyes open and closed, and sports activities requiring
eye-hand coordination. These ex- ercises
theoretically fatigue the
vestibular response and force the CNS to compensate by habituation to the stimulus.
In 1980, Brandt and Daroff167,168 described home repo-
sitioning exercises that involve a sequence of rapid
lateral head/trunk tilts repeated serially to promote loosening and ultimately dispersion of debris toward
the utricular cavity. In these exercises, the patient starts in a sitting position
and
moves quickly to the right-side lying position, with the head rotated 45 degrees and facing upward.
This position is maintained for 30 seconds after the vertigo stops. The pa-
tient then moves rapidly to a left-side lying position, with the head rotated
45 degrees and facing upward. In early work with patients with BPPV, patients
repeated these ma- neuvers moving from the sitting to side-lying position three
times a day for 2 weeks while
hospitalized and had excellent
resolution of BPPV symptoms.169
Vestibular Rehabilitation as a Treatment
of BPPV
Relatively few RCTs and case series have been published regarding the effectiveness of vestibular rehabilitation as the initial
therapy for BPPV. In a prospective analysis of 25 consecutive patients with BPPV, Banfield
et al170 reported that patients demonstrate an excellent short-term
response rate of 96 percent subjectively to vestibular rehabilitation treatment
with an average of three clinic visits per patient, but the authors noted a significant recurrence rate of BPPV
with long-term follow-up (mean follow-up 3.8 years). The authors cited one
advantage of vestibular rehabilitation: the capability of patients to be
self-reliant in their ability to return to habituation exercises should
symptoms recur. In a controlled trial of 60 patients
with BPPV comparing a PRM, vestibular
rehabilitation exercises and no treatment, vestib- ular rehabilitation provided better
resolution of vertigo
com- pared with no treatment.171 The PRM arm demonstrated
resolution of symptoms with fewer treatments than those required for vestibular
rehabilitation, although the relative improvements at 3-month follow-up
were comparable.
Several studies have compared vestibular
rehabilitation exercises to particle rehabilitation maneuvers in the treat-
ment of posterior canal BPPV. In an RCT of 124 patients randomized to CRP, modified liberatory maneuver, sham maneuver,
Brandt-Daroff exercises, and vestibular habitua- tion exercises
by Cohen, repositioning
maneuvers were more effective
than Brandt-Daroff exercises or habituation exercises.43 Both types of vestibular rehabilitation treat- ments,
however, were individually more effective than a sham intervention.43,172 Soto Varela et al147 comparatively analyzed a total of 106 BPPV patients
randomly assigned to receive Brandt-Daroff habituation exercises, the Semont
maneuver, or the Epley maneuver. At the 1-week
follow-up, similar cure rates were obtained with the Semont and Epley
maneuvers (74% and 71%, respectively), both cure rates being significantly higher than that obtained with Brandt- Daroff exercises (24%). At 3-month follow-up, the cure rate for
the Brandt-Daroff exercises increased significantly to 62
percent, although the rate was still lower
than that of PRMs.
Other studies have demonstrated similar results for vestib- ular rehabilitation in BPPV.28,173
Vestibular rehabilitation is thought to
improve long-term outcomes for BPPV.
Although data are mixed, a few studies have indicated that use of
vestibular rehabilitation may decrease recurrence rates
for BPPV.136,174 This protective
effect against recurrence
of vestibular rehabilitation may be more pronounced in the elderly.136
Several prospective studies have
demonstrated the safety and effectiveness of vestibular rehabilitation for
unilateral peripheral vestibular disorders; the results are summarized
in a
recent Cochrane collaboration report.172 Among 21 included randomized trials, there were no reports
of adverse effects due to vestibular rehabilitation therapy. Current
pub- lished evidence is inadequate to indicate superiority for one form of vestibular rehabilitation vs another. There is also not enough evidence to favor formal
outpatient vestibular therapy performed with a clinician over independent home
therapy.175
In summary, with respect to posterior
canal BPPV, ves- tibular rehabilitation demonstrates superior treatment out-
comes compared with placebo. In short-term evaluation, vestibular
rehabilitation is less effective at producing com- plete symptom resolution
than PRMs. With longer-term follow-up, however, its effectiveness approaches
that of PRMs. Insufficient data exist concerning the response of lateral canal BPPV to vestibular
therapy; this area needs further research.
Cost considerations may become
important if repeated visits for clinician-supervised therapy are required as
op- posed to initial patient instruction followed by home-based therapy.
Patients with certain comorbidities may not be appropriate candidates for
vestibular rehabilitation or may need specialized, individually tailored
vestibular rehabilita- tion protocols. Examples of such comorbidities include
cer- vical stenosis, Down syndrome, severe rheumatoid arthritis, cervical
radiculopathies, Paget’s disease, morbid obesity, ankylosing spondylitis, low
back dysfunction, and spinal cord injuries. On the other hand, patients with
preexisting otological or neurological disorders may derive more ben- efit from vestibular rehabilitation as a treatment
for BPPV.
Evidence Profile
● Aggregate evidence
quality: Grade C, based on controlled
observational studies and limited RCTs
● Benefit: potentially faster resolution of symptoms com- pared
with observation alone
● Harm: no serious adverse
events noted in published trials; transient provocation of BPPV
symptoms during rehabil- itation exercises; potential for delayed symptom
resolu- tion compared with PRMs as a sole intervention
● Cost: need for repeated
visits if done with clinician
su- pervision; cost of therapy
● Benefit-harm assessment: relative balance of benefits and harm
● Value judgments: vestibular rehabilitation considered
possibly better as an adjunctive therapy rather than a primary treatment
modality. (Subsets of patients with preexisting balance deficit, CNS disorders, or risk for falls may derive more benefit
from VR than the patient with isolated BPPV.)
● Role of patient preferences: substantial role for shared
decision making
● Exclusions: patients with physical limitations such as cervical
stenosis, Down syndrome, severe rheumatoid arthritis, cervical radiculopathies, Paget’s
disease, morbid obesity, ankylosing
spondylitis, low back
dysfunction, and spinal cord injuries
● Policy level: option
Statement 4c. Observation as
Initial Therapy Clinicians may offer observation as initial management for patients with BPPV and with assurance of follow-up.
Option based on data from cohort and observational studies with heterogeneity and a relative
balance of benefits
and harms.
Observation may be defined as a “watchful
waiting” or
the withholding of specific
therapeutic interventions for a
given disease. Observation is often considered when the disease course is
self-limited and/or felt to be benign with limited sequelae occurring from the
withholding of therapy. In BPPV, observation implies that therapeutic
interventions such as vestibular rehabilitation and/or PRMs will be with- held, anticipating a natural and spontaneous improvement of the symptoms of BPPV.
Under a course of observation, patients may still be instructed to avoid provocative
posi- tions and activities where the risk of injury
(ie, falls) may be
increased until symptoms resolve spontaneously or until they are reassessed for symptom resolution.
To consider observation as an option
in the management of BPPV, the clinician must determine the natural history
of the BPPV. It has been presumed that the natural history of BPPV is
one of eventual resolution in most patients. It should be noted, however, that
an often quoted study by Blakley,176 which reported high rates of spontaneous reso- lution of
BPPV, relied on subjective symptom reporting, rather than objective testing
with a Dix-Hallpike maneuver, as the outcome measure for resolution. It is believed that a significant
fraction of patients reporting subjective im- provement
actually have reduction in symptoms
second- ary to avoiding provocative (vertigo-producing) positions rather than actual cure.139 More recent RCTs have uti- lized
objective testing with the Dix-Hallpike maneuver as an
additional outcome measure to assess
for objective
resolution of BPPV. Notably,
to observe
proper blinding, most RCTs also use
a sham positional maneuver in the
control group, which theoretically
may affect
the natural
history of BPPV.
In several studies, the spontaneous rate of symptomatic
resolution of BPPV ranges from 15 to 86 percent. The reported rate of
spontaneous improvement based on objec- tive positional testing (ie, conversion
to a negative Dix- Hallpike maneuver) ranges from 35 percent to 50 per- cent.139 As demonstrated in Table 8, the
natural history of posterior canal BPPV varies widely across
studies
at
a
1-month and a 3-month follow-up interval. Further variabil- ity in the spontaneous resolution rate arises from differences in duration of symptoms
prior to actual diagnoses of BPPV
Table 8
Symptom resolution rates for observation alone for BPPV*|
Reference Resolved n/m
|
% Resolved
|
Sham or pure observation
|
Time to
assessment
|
|
|
von Brevern 200711
|
22/26
|
84.6
|
Sham
|
4 weeks
|
|
Sekine 2006142
|
48/60
|
80.0
|
Observation
|
1 month
|
|
Imai 200549
|
45/70
|
64.0
|
Observation
|
1 month
|
|
Simhadri 2003177
|
3/15
|
20.0
|
Observation
|
4 weeks
|
|
Yimtae 2003129
|
7/20
|
35.0
|
Observation
|
1 month
|
|
Sherman 2001131
|
11/22
|
50.0
|
Sham
|
3 months
|
|
Asawavichianginda 2000135
|
18/22
|
81.8
|
Observation
|
3 months
|
|
Steenerson 1996171
|
17/40
|
42.5
|
Observation
|
3 months
|
|
Lynn 1995128
|
3/15
|
20.0
|
Sham
|
1 month
|
|
Blakley 1994176
|
19/22
|
86.4
|
Observation
|
1 month
|
*Endpoint: resolution of vertigo symptoms
at the time of assessment.
as well as differences in duration of follow-up.42,59,128,142
Longitudinal follow-up studies of untreated BPPV
patients are lacking, but one study of completely untreated patients determined
a mean time interval from onset of symptoms to spontaneous resolution of BPPV of 39 47 days.49 As would be expected, spontaneous symptom
resolution rates increase with increasing duration of follow-up among ob-
served patients.
Although observation of posterior
canal BPPV is an option for management, clinicians should also be aware
that other treatments such as the PRM have been shown to offer patients
faster resolution of BPPV symptoms. A meta-anal- ysis of nine separate
trials examining the efficacy
of the PRM for BPPV treatment
demonstrated consistent improve- ment in the treatment group, with
up to 4.1 times greater rates of symptom resolution (95% confidence interval,
3.1-
5.2) in the PRM groups vs the control groups at initial
assessments within 1 month. Studies with follow-up at be- yond 1 month still
demonstrated an improvement rate of nearly three times that of controls.139 Other longer-term
follow-up data also suggest that patients treated
with a PRM had lower rates of relapse of BPPV at 6 months and 1 year posttreatment.177
Observation as an option for the
management of poste- rior canal BPPV offers the potential benefits of avoiding repositioning maneuvers or vestibular rehabilitation,
which in turn may provoke symptoms and discomfort. There may also be a cost
savings from decreased rates of referral for vestibular rehabilitation or PRMs.
From a potential harms perspective, patients who elect for the observation
option should be informed about a typically longer duration of symptoms
compared with a treatment maneuver and poten- tially higher recurrence rates.
Appropriate precautions for the risks associated with BPPV symptoms should be
taken during the watchful
waiting period.
The natural history of lateral canal
BPPV is less well defined than that of posterior canal BPPV. Several authors
have commented that lateral canal BPPV may be prone to more rapid spontaneous
resolution than posterior canal BPPV.51,142 In one study, the mean time between the onset of
vertigo in lateral canal BPPV to spontaneous resolution was
16 19 days.49 Although repositioning
maneuvers have
shown success in lateral
canal BPPV, overall high quality
comparative data regarding treatment
vs observation
such as RCTs are limited in this subtype of BPPV.58,142,148
Thus, observation of lateral canal
BPPV remains an option for
man- agement. Future RCTs need to
be dedicated
to the
interven- tional management of lateral canal BPPV.
Evidence Profile
● Aggregate evidence quality: Grade B, based on control groups from RCTs and observational
studies with heter- ogeneity in follow-up
and outcomes measures
● Benefit: symptom resolution in 15 to 85 percent
of pa- tients at 1 month without intervention
● Harm: prolonged
symptoms compared with other inter- ventions that may expose patients to
increased risks for falls or lost days of work
● Cost: indirect costs of delayed resolution
compared with other measures
● Benefit-harm assessment: relative balance of benefits and harms
● Value judgments: bias of the panel for treatment inter- vention rather than observation,
particularly with respect to the value
of a quicker time to resolution (The panel felt that older patients and patients
with preexisting balance disorders or high risks for falls may not be suitable
for observation.)
● Role of patient preferences: substantial for shared deci-
sion making
● Exclusions: none
● Policy level: option
Statement 5. Medical Therapy
Clinicians should not
routinely treat BPPV with vestib- ular suppressant medications such as
antihistamines or benzodiazepines. Recommendation against based on ob- servational studies
and a preponderance of benefit over harm.
The symptoms of
vertigo due to many different under- lying etiologies are commonly treated with
medications. Clinicians may prescribe pharmacological management to either 1)
reduce the spinning sensations of vertigo specifi- cally and/or 2) to reduce
the accompanying motion sickness symptoms. These motion sickness symptoms
include a con- stellation of autonomic or vegetative symptoms such as nausea,
vomiting, and diarrhea, which can accompany the vertigo. Such pharmacological
therapies for vertigo may be broadly termed vestibular suppressant medications.178,179
Several categories of vestibular
suppressant medications are in common use. Of these, the most commonly used are
benzodiazepines and antihistamines. Benzodiazepines, such as diazepam and
clonazepam, have anxiolytic, sedative, muscle
relaxant, and anticonvulsant properties derived from potentiating the inhibitory effect
of the gamma-amino bu- tyric acid system. In prolonged dizziness, these
medications can reduce the subjective sensation
of spinning, but they
also interfere with central compensation in peripheral ves- tibular conditions.
Antihistamines, on the other hand, ap- pear
to have a
suppressive effect on
the central emetic center to relieve the nausea and
vomiting associated with motion sickness. Common examples of antihistamines
used to treat symptoms of vertigo and/or associated motion sick- ness include
meclizine and diphenhydramine. Other medi- cations that are often used for
motion sickness include promethazine, which is a phenothiazine with
antihistamine properties, and ondansetron, which is a serotonin-5-hy-
droxytryptamine-3 antagonist. Finally, anticholinergic med- ications such as scopolamine block acetylcholine, which is
a widespread CNS transmitter, and help with motion sick-
ness by reducing
neural mismatching.178,179
There is no evidence in the literature
to suggest that any of these vestibular suppressant medications are effective as a definitive, primary
treatment for BPPV, or as a substitute for repositioning maneuvers.98,178,180-182 Some studies show a
resolution of BPPV over time with medications, but these studies follow
patients for the period of time in which spontaneous resolution would occur.139,183-185 In one dou-
ble-blind controlled trial by McClure and Willet185 compar- ing diazepam, lorazepam, and placebo, all groups showed
a gradual decline in symptoms with no additional relief in the drug treatment
arms. In a small study, Itaya et al184 com- pared PRMs to a medication-alone treatment
arm and found that PRMs had substantially higher treatment responses
(78.6%-93.3% improvement) compared with medication alone (30.8% improvement) at
2 weeks follow-up. These data reinforced previous data from Fujino et al182 that also indicated superiority of vestibular training for
BPPV over medication use alone. A lack of benefit from vestibular suppressants and their inferiority to PRMs indicate
that clinicians should not substitute pharmacological treatment of symptoms associated with BPPV in lieu of other more
effective treatment modalities.
Conversely, vestibular suppressant medications
have the potential for significant harm. All of these medications may
produce drowsiness, cognitive deficits, and interference with driving vehicles or operating machinery.186-190 Medi-
cations used for vestibular suppression, especially psycho- tropic medications
such as benzodiazepines, are a signifi- cant independent risk factor for falls.191 The risk of falls
increases in patients taking multiple medications and with the use of medications such as antidepressants.16,192 The
potential for polypharmacy when adding vestibular suppres- sants further exposes the elderly
to additional risk.193 Edu- cational programs to modify practitioner’s
use of such med- ications can result in a reduction of falls.194
There are other potential
harmful side effects of vestibular
suppressants. Benzodiazepines and antihistamines
interfere with central compensation
for a vestibular injury.3,195,196 The use of vestibular suppressants may obscure the findings
on the Dix-Hallpike maneuvers. In addition, there is evidence of additional
potential harm from the antihistamine class of medications on cognitive functioning,186 and on gastroin- testinal motility, urinary
retention, vision, and dry mouth in the elderly.197
In summary, vestibular suppressant
medications are not recommended for treatment of BPPV, other than for the
short-term management of vegetative symptoms such as nausea or vomiting in a
severely symptomatic patient. Ex- amples of potential short-term uses include
patients who are severely symptomatic yet refuse
therapy or patients who become severely symptomatic after a PRM. Antiemetics
may also be considered for prophylaxis for patients who have previously
manifested severe nausea and/or vomiting with the Dix-Hallpike maneuvers and in
whom a PRM is planned. If prescribed
for these very specific
indications, clinicians should also provide counseling that the rates of
cognitive dysfunction, falls, drug interactions, and machin- ery and driving
accidents increase with use of vestibular suppressants.
Evidence Profile
● Aggregate evidence
quality: Grade C, based on observa-
tional and cross-sectional studies
● Benefit: unknown
or
unclear
benefit
in
patients
with
BPPV
● Harm: adverse
effects from or medication interactions with these medications;
decreased diagnostic sensitivity during Dix-Hallpike maneuvers from vestibular
suppres- sion
● Cost: none
● Benefit-harm assessment: preponderance of benefit over
harm
● Value judgments: avoidance of harm from ineffective treatments
● Role of patient preferences: minimal
● Exclusions:
severely symptomatic patients refusing other treatment options and patients
requiring prophylaxis for CRP
● Policy level: recommendation against
Statement
6a. Reassessment of Treatment
Response
Clinicians should reassess patients within 1 month after an initial
period of observation or treatment to confirm symptom resolution. Recommendation
based on observa- tional outcomes studies and expert opinion and a prepon-
derance of benefit over harm.
Patients with BPPV, regardless of initial treatment
option rendered, will have variable responses
to therapy.43 The response
to therapy may depend on several factors
including the accuracy of the diagnosis of BPPV, the duration of
symptoms prior to the diagnosis of BPPV, compliance with prescribed therapy,
and other factors.42,120 Patients with BPPV should be reassessed within a set time interval after
the diagnosis of BPPV for several reasons.
Failure to respond to initial therapy
may indicate an initially erroneous diagnosis of BPPV, and one of the major
goals of reassessment is to ensure the accuracy of diagnosis of BPPV. As noted,
other more serious CNS disorders may mimic BPPV, and these conditions would not be expected to respond to traditional therapies
prescribed for BPPV. In cohort studies, the rate of false-positive diagnosis
for BPPV subsequently found to be CNS lesions after failed treatment (therefore, a highly selected population) with
PRM ranges from 1.1 to 3 percent.120,198 Thus,
persistence of symptoms after initial management requires clinicians to
reassess and reevaluate patients for other etiologies of vertigo. Con- versely,
resolution of BPPV symptoms after initial therapy such as a PRM would
corroborate an accurate diagnosis of BPPV.
Patients who are initially treated
with vestibular rehabil- itation may fail to resolve symptoms owing to multiple
factors including poor compliance. In addition, patients
who do not respond to initial therapy are likely to remain at risk for falls, decreased quality of life, and other consequences
of unresolved BPPV. For these reasons, patients whose symptoms of BPPV fail to
resolve should also be identified and classified as initial treatment
failures.
To
define a treatment
failure in BPPV,
the clinician needs to determine
both a failed outcome criterion and an appropriate time interval for assessment
of treatment fail- ure. Successful treatment outcomes for interventions for
BPPV are traditionally measured in clinical trials by sub- jective symptom
resolution and/or by conversion to a neg- ative
Dix-Hallpike test. Almost
all treatment trials
for BPPV report an outcome measure in the form of the pa- tient’s
reported symptoms, typically reported among three categorical outcomes:
complete resolution of symptoms, improvement,
or no improvement/worsening.42 When in- cluded
in meta-analyses, treatment responses are typically incorporated as “all or
none” for the complete resolution of vertigo.42,139,140
Because effective treatment options
are available for BPPV that typically render patients symptom free (if treat-
ment is successful), it is logical to use complete symptom resolution as the outcome
of choice at the time of reassess-
ment by the clinician. A symptom-based reassessment also allows
clinicians to use clinical judgment as to the most appropriate modality for
follow-up for individual patients, including
telephone communication, electronic communica- tion, or office based reexamination. This symptom-based assessment of treatment
resolution should be detailed enough to distinguish patients with truly
decreased symp- toms related to treatment or patients with minimized symp- toms
attributable to positional avoidance (who, in fact, may not be treatment
successes) from those with true symptom resolution.139
Although
conversion to a negative Dix-Hallpike test may have the
advantage of being a more objective reassessment than patients’ reported
symptoms, it also carries the disad- vantage of requiring a repeat clinical
visit on the part of the patient with associated direct and indirect costs. The
Dix- Hallpike test status is commonly reported in therapeutic trials of BPPV.
Persistent symptoms of BPPV and other underlying conditions, however, have been
reported in the face of negative Dix-Hallpike testing after therapy, poten-
tially making this a less sensitive reassessment tool.128,199
Conversely, patients may report an absence of symptoms after
therapeutic intervention yet still have a positive Dix- Hallpike test.43,59,131 “Subclinical
BPPV” has been offered as an explanation for this.43 Because of the potential dis- cordance between negative
Dix-Hallpike conversion and patients’ reported symptoms after treatment for
BPPV, Dix- Hallpike conversion is not recommended as the primary reassessment
criterion in routine clinical practice but may still be used as a secondary
outcome measure.
There is no widely accepted time interval at
which to assess patients for treatment failure. Therapeutic trials in BPPV
variably report follow-up assessments for treatment outcomes at 40 hours, 2
weeks, 1 month, and up to 6 months, although the most commonly chosen interval
for follow-up assessment of treatment response is within or at 1 month.42,139,140 Because the natural history of BPPV exhib- its a relatively consistent spontaneous rate of resolution with observation alone, a longer time
interval between diagnosis and reassessment would allow patients with true BPPV
to resolve symptoms spontaneously, likely irrespective of treatment.142
Conversely, the choice of an excessively
long time in- terval between diagnosis
and reassessment would also allow cases of an erroneous BPPV diagnosis
to potentially progress, leading to potential patient harm. In addition,
because recurrence of BPPV may occur as early as 3 months after initial treatment, further
delaying the time interval for reassessment
may erroneously incorporate
a recurrent BPPV syndrome (ie,
the initial BPPV responded to treat- ment with a suitable symptom-free interval
thereafter, fol- lowed by recurrent BPPV) rather than a persistent BPPV
syndrome.38,174
Given that commonly reported rates of
spontaneous complete symptom resolution at the 1-month interval for BPPV range
from 20 to 80 percent
at 1 month, reassessment
at 1 month will also better allow
for patients to be recon- sidered for further interventional treatment to treat
unre- solved BPPV.59,128-130,142,159 Thus,
choosing a reassess- ment time interval of 1 month after diagnosis allows a
relative balance between overly early reassessment (which would force the
unnecessary reassessment of patients who would likely resolve with additional
time) and unduly de- layed reassessment (which would potentially allow harm
from an unknown missed diagnosis or relegate patients
to an excess time interval of symptomatic suffering
from BPPV).
One potential problem with a strict
time interval for reassessment is that patients may not have been exposed to
their initial treatment (vestibular rehabilitation or PRM as opposed to
observation, which may begin immediately after diagnosis) within 1 month of
diagnosis depending on refer- ral patterns, patient
preferences, or waiting
lists for specialty evaluation and treatment. This
situation is especially true when the diagnosing clinician may not be the same
as the treating clinician. Even if a delay occurs between BPPV diagnosis and
completion of the initial treatment, clinicians should still reassess patients
at 1 month but may choose to reassign a second time interval for reassessment
after com- pletion of the initial treatment
option.
Evidence Profile
● Aggregate evidence
quality: Grade C, based on studies
with known significant failure rates for an observation option and lower failure
rates for PRM
● Benefit:
increased accuracy of diagnosis of BPPV; iden- tification of patients with persistent symptoms who were initially treated with observation and may benefit from vestibular rehabilitation or PRM
to hasten symptom res- olution
● Harm: none
● Cost: cost of reassessment
● Benefit-harm assessment: preponderance of benefit over
harm
● Value
judgments: assurance of accuracy of diagnosis and capture of patients who could benefit from treatment or
re-treatment to improve
symptom resolution
● Role of patient preferences: minimal
● Policy level: recommendation
Statement 6b. Evaluation of
Treatment
Failure
Clinicians should
evaluate patients with BPPV who are initial treatment failures for persistent
BPPV or under- lying peripheral vestibular or CNS disorders. Recom- mendation based on
observational studies of diagnostic outcomes in patients with BPPV and a
preponderance of benefit over harm.
Patients with persistent symptoms of
vertigo, dizziness, or unsteadiness at the time of reassessment of the initial
treatment response are classified
as treatment failures. Treatment failures require reevaluation for the
following reasons: 1) Persistent
BPPV may be present and responsive
to additional maneuvers; 2) coexisting vestibular conditions may be present that can be identified
and treated; and 3) serious CNS
disorders may simulate BPPV and need to be identified.28,120,200
Persistent BPPV
Patients with BPPV who initially are treated with observa- tion may
fail to resolve spontaneously and have persistent BPPV at the time
reassessment. Also, on the basis of failure rates of vestibular rehabilitation
or a single-session PRM ranging from 15
to 50 percent,
a significant number
of patients initially managed with vestibular rehabilitation or PRM will have persistent BPPV at reassessment, which also indicates
a treatment failure.28,42,43,140,159 Reevaluation
of a treatment failure should include obtaining a history of ver- tigo, determining
if the vertigo is provoked by positional change relative to gravity (ie, lying
down in bed, rolling over, bending down, or tilting the head back), which then
suggests persistent BPPV. As with the original diagnostic criteria, the
Dix-Hallpike test should be repeated to confirm the diagnosis of BPPV. If the Dix-Hallpike maneuver
is still positive, repeat PRMs
can then be performed as a preferred treatment. The rate of successful treatment of BPPV reaches
90 to 98 percent when additional repositioning maneuvers are
subsequently performed.201,202 Therefore, the PRMs are the treatment of choice for initial BPPV
treatment failures deemed to be due to persistent BPPV.
A similar approach may be adopted for the
reevaluation of persistent symptoms
of vertigo after an initial
diagnosis of lateral canal BPPV. The supine roll test should be re-
peated and, if characteristic nystagmus is elicited, a PRM appropriate for
lateral canal BPPV may be repeated as well. There are limited data regarding
the management of treat- ment failures after PRM for lateral canal BPPV, because this
condition seems to respond more consistently to PRM
and it also has a higher spontaneous resolution rate.56,142,148,151 Some studies indicate
cure rates of 86 to
100
percent with up to four PRM treatments in lateral canal BPPV.58,152 Further
subanalysis suggests that the apogeop- tropic variant of lateral canal BPPV may
be more refractory to therapy.5,58
A small percentage of patients initially diagnosed
and treated for lateral canal BPPV or horizontal canal BPPV may experience a
canal switch. In these cases, initial hori- zontal canal
BPPV may transform
into posterior canal BPPV
in up to 6 percent
of cases.55,56 Similarly, a small fraction of patients (also
approximating 6%) initially pre- senting with posterior canal BPPV may
transition after treatment to lateral canal BPPV.129,144 A small subset of patients who do not respond to treatment
for posterior canal and/or lateral canal BPPV may suffer from anterior canal
BPPV, and may need to be evaluated
accordingly.18 Finally,
although rare, two semicircular canals may be simulta- neously involved. The
second canal’s involvement may become evident at the time of reassessment if
one of the involved canals was appropriately treated.120 Thus, reas-
sessment of persistent positional vertigo
in BPPV should
include examination for
involvement of other semicircular canals than originally diagnosed.
Coexisting
Vestibular System Dysfunction
A BPPV treatment failure
subsequently may be found to be a case manifesting vertiginous symptoms that
are provoked by head and body movements in general (ie, not primarily provoked
by positional changes relative to gravity); unpro- voked (ie, spontaneous)
episodes of vertigo occurring while not moving; or in fact, a constant
unsteadiness. These spe- cific findings should
be identified by clinicians at the time of
reevaluation; such findings suggest the presence of vestib-
ular system dysfunction associated with or in addition to the
initially treated BPPV. There may be several possible fac- tors at play when
vestibular system dysfunction accompa- nies BPPV.
In a study by Monobe et al,203 treatment failure of the
PRM was most commonly seen in patients with BPPV
secondary to head trauma or vestibular neuritis. Because vestibular neuritis
and head trauma are both frequently associated with vestibular dysfunction, the
cause of persis- tent symptoms
following treatment of BPPV is likely re- lated to widespread dysfunction
within the vestibular sys- tem in this setting.204 Because BPPV is more common in
patients with Ménière’s disease and migraine, vestibular system dysfunction
associated with these disorders can lead to prolonged symptoms of BPPV, greater
chance for recur- rence of BPPV, and increased risk for falls, particularly in older persons.97,115,117,205-207
In addition, BPPV not associated with
any other otolog- ical or neurological disease can still be associated with an
underlying impaired vestibular function, and these individ- uals are more
likely to have incomplete resolution of symp- toms even if their Dix-Hallpike
testing normalizes with PRM.118 Finally, transient vestibular
dysfunction can also occur following repositioning
maneuvers. Evidence sug- gests that balance function continues to be affected
between
1 to 3 months after repositioning maneuvers, and that
some of these patients may need additional balance therapy (ie, counseling,
vestibular rehabilitation) to prevent falls and decrease their fear of falling after the vertigo
from BPPV has resolved.36,208-210 Thus, reevaluation of BPPV treat- ment failures should include a
search for these associated conditions.
When coexisting vestibular system dysfunction
is sus- pected, additional testing should be considered. This testing may
include audiometric testing to screen for Ménière’s disease and nerve VIII
pathology such as acoustic neuroma, vestibular function testing to detect
central and peripheral vestibular dysfunction, and CNS imaging to detect CNS
pathology. Such subsequent testing will need to be tailored to the clinical
presentation, and clinicians should exercise their clinical judgment.
Vestibular rehabilitation has been shown to be an effective treatment for
vestibular symptoms due to the potentially persistent vestibular dysfunction
as- sociated with BPPV; this treatment may reduce the risk for falls.136
CNS Disorders Masquerading as BPPV
Although vertigo of central origin is frequently associated with
neurological symptoms such as gait, speech, and au- tonomic dysfunction,
it is important
to recognize that, rarely, CNS disorders can masquerade as BPPV.211 Many of these
have been previously discussed in the section on differential diagnosis, but
the relative likelihood of their diagnosis increases in the face of initial
treatment failure. In one study, a CNS disorder that explained BPPV treatment
failure was found in 3 percent of patients.198
Whenever the signs and symptoms of BPPV are
atypical or refractory to treatment, additional history and physical
examination should be obtained to address the possibility of undiagnosed CNS
disease.212 Patients with symptoms con- sistent with those
of BPPV who do not show improvement or resolution after
undergoing the PRM, especially after
two or three attempted maneuvers, or those who describe asso- ciated
auditory or neurological symptoms should be evalu- ated with a thorough
neurological examination, additional CNS testing, and/or MRI of the brain and
posterior fossa to identify possible intracranial pathological conditions.82,213
Evidence Profile
● Aggregate evidence
quality: Grade C, based on case se- ries of treatment failure and limited
retrospective diag- nostic studies
● Benefit: expedition of effective treatment
of patients with persistent BPPV and associated comorbidities; decrease
in the potential for missed
serious medical conditions that require a different
treatment algorithm
● Harm: none
● Cost: costs of reevaluation and the additional testing
● Benefit-harm assessment: preponderance
of benefit vs harm
● Value judgments: comprehensive treatment of not only BPPV but associated conditions that
affect balance and function; expeditious treatment of cases of persistent BPPV
with a PRM (as more definitive therapy)
following the failure of observation or vestibular rehabilitation
● Role of patient preferences: minimal
● Policy level: recommendation
Statement 7. Education
Clinicians should counsel
patients regarding the impact of BPPV on their safety, the potential for
disease recur- rence, and the importance of follow-up. Recommendation based on
observational studies of diagnostic outcomes and recurrence in patients with
BPPV and a preponderance of benefit over harm.
Although BPPV generally responds well
to treatment, there is a significant
rate of BPPV recurrence after initial
resolution or clinical cure. Most trials of BPPV maintain limited follow-up,
rarely beyond 3 months. In the few trials of BPPV with longer-term follow-up,
the rate of recurrent BPPV (ie, BPPV symptoms manifesting again after a symp-
tom-free period) is reported to be 5 to 13.5
percent
at
10 to 18 percent.143,214 The recurrence rate continues to
increase and may be as high as 37 to 50 percent at 5 years by
Kaplan-Meier estimation.38,214 Overall the recurrence rate of BPPV may be estimated
at 15 percent per year.38
Patients with BPPV after trauma are likely to demonstrate
an even higher recurrence rate of their BPPV.97
Thus, clinicians should be aware of the recurrence risk of BPPV and
should counsel patients accordingly. Counseling will likely have several benefits,
which include earlier rec- ognition by
patients of recurrent BPPV, allowing earlier return for PRM or vestibular
rehabilitation. Also, counsel- ing regarding recurrence will offset the
potential anxiety patients may feel when BPPV recurs and allow them to make
corresponding adjustments in their daily routine to minimize the impact of BPPV symptomatology.
As with any balance or vestibular
disorder, patients with BPPV should be counseled regarding the potential that
BPPV may place them at greater risk for falls.215 This risk may apply particularly to patients with
preexisting balance disorders or vestibular
deficits and a separate onset of BPPV. The propensity for falling may
actually be a signif- icant motivating factor for patients to be referred for
eval- uation of underlying BPPV.16 The risk of falls and fear of falls are significant considerations in the management of the elderly who suffer from chronic dizziness.216 In a study of
120 elderly patients with chronic vestibular disorders,
36.7 percent carried the diagnosis of BPPV. Fifty-three percent of subjects had fallen at least once in the past year,
and 29.2 percent had recurrent falls.216 Other authors have confirmed a relatively high rate of BPPV
and associated falling ten- dencies in the elderly.15,217
Practically speaking, clinicians
should counsel patients and their families regarding the risk of falls
associated with BPPV. This information is particularly important for the
elderly and frail who may be more susceptible to serious injury as a result of
falling. Such counseling could include assessment of
home safety, activity
restrictions, and the need for home supervision until BPPV is resolved.90 Pa- tients may be particularly vulnerable in the
time interval between initial diagnosis
of BPPV and definitive treatment when they are referred to
another clinician for PRM or vestibular rehabilitation. Counseling should
therefore occur at the time of initial diagnosis. The costs of such counseling
are anticipated to be minimal and will enhance patient and public safety while
avoiding potential posttraumatic se- quelae.
Finally, patients should be counseled
regarding the im- portance of follow-up after diagnosis of BPPV. Patients initially treated with observation should be counseled
that, if BPPV fails to resolve spontaneously, effective therapies such
as the PRM may then be undertaken. Also, patients should be educated about
atypical symptoms (subjective hearing loss, gait disturbance, non-positional
vertigo, nau- sea, vomiting, etc.) whose occurrence or persistence after
resolution of the primary symptoms of BPPV warrant fur- ther clinical evaluation.120 As noted, such symptoms, par- ticularly when unmasked by the
resolution of BPPV may indicate an underlying vestibular or CNS disorder.
Clini- cians may also educate patients with refractory BPPV or repeatedly
recurrent BPPV that in select cases a surgical remedy (“canal plugging
procedure” or singular neurec- tomy) may be considered.7,218
Evidence Profile
● Aggregate evidence
quality: Grade C, based on observa-
tional and cross-sectional studies of recurrence and fall risk
● Benefit: increased awareness of fall risk, potentially de- creasing injuries related to falls; increased
patient aware- ness of BPPV recurrence, allowing
prompt intervention
● Harm: none
● Cost: none
● Benefit-harm assessment: preponderance of benefit over
harm
● Value judgments: inadequate data to elaborate recom- mendations for patients with BPPV with regard to driving
vehicles
● Role of patient preferences: none
● Policy level: recommendation
Implementation Considerations
The complete guideline is published as a supplement to Otolaryngology–Head and Neck Surgery,
which will facil- itate reference and distribution. An executive summary
highlighting key recommendations from the guideline will be published to
facilitate information dissemination. Por- tions of the guideline will be
presented at various clinical meetings including a planned presentation in the
workshop series of the American College of Physicians annual meet- ing.
Existing brochures and publications by the AAO-HNS Foundation will be updated to reflect the guideline recom-
mendations. Members of the panel will be representing the guideline at their
specialty societies, and executive summa- ries to be copublished in the primary
care and physical therapy literature are anticipated.
Because the guideline presents
recommendations for an office-based diagnosis of BPPV based on positional maneu- vers, an anticipated barrier to implementation is
clinician unfamiliarity with the Dix-Hallpike maneuver and with the supine roll
test. In addition to the descriptive and diagram- matic representations of the
diagnostic tests, readers will be provided with Web-based video links that
illustrate perfor- mance of these maneuvers, as well as video representations
of the expected diagnostic nystagmus findings,
especially in the case of lateral canal BPPV. These media aids may also
be assisted by a laminated teaching card that describes the maneuvers. It will
be important to incorporate guideline recommendations into the development of
point-of-care de- cision support tools
to encourage point-of-service adherence
to the guidelines, and to
facilitate rapid clinical decision making in a busy office environment.
Another barrier
to implementation of this guideline is potential clinician or patient
preference for the ordering of diagnostic tests to evaluate vertigo. Because
the differential diagnosis of vertigo may be vast and at times complex,
clinicians may feel
obligated to order
diagnostic testing such as CNS
imaging or vestibular testing to rule out other causes of vertigo, even when
diagnostic criteria for BPPV are met. In addition, patients may expect imaging
or addi- tional testing because they perceive that such testing is required or
a safer course of action in the routine manage- ment of vertigo. Informational
pamphlets for patients that explain their diagnosis and provide realistic
expectations with regard to the natural history of BPPV may ease this
difficulty. Specialty clinicians will likely exhibit a natural tendency for ordering additional
diagnostic testing owing to a variety of factors. Clinician and patient
education regard- ing outcome expectations and counseling on proper fol- low-up may offset these issues.
Physician and patient edu- cation, either Web-based or published results of
large trials on diagnostic outcomes
for BPPV, will also help offset
these tendencies.
With respect to
treatment with PRMs, several barriers may need to be overcome.
First, many clinicians are likely to be unfamiliar with the CRP or other treatment maneuvers. In a busy clinical setting,
diagnosing physicians may be unable or unwilling to take additional time to
treat BPPV at the same time the diagnosis
is made. Because of a paucity
of data in the primary care setting (only one RCT that failed to demonstrate
effectiveness of the CRP), convincing pri- mary care physicians to use the CRP
as an initial treatment modality may be difficult.
In such cases, increasing famil- iarity with CRP or additional
training of clinicians such as audiologists, physical therapists, and other
providers may facilitate patients’ access to CRP. Training courses on per-
formance of the CRP offered at societal meetings will also help overcome
this barrier.
Finally,
patients may seek what are perceived to be simpler solutions such as medication
therapy for BPPV. Given that medication therapy has not been shown effective in
the treatment of BPPV, clinicians will need to educate patients that these medications offer more harm than benefit. Additional education of patients
will be required
in the form of handouts or brochures that inform patients of the risks
associated with symptomatic
BPPV, including risks
for falls, recurrence of BPPV, and treatment options. Algo- rithms for
fall assessment and home safety assessment will allow clinicians to stratify
patients as to these risks.87
RESEARCH NEEDS
As determined by the panel’s review of the literature,
as- sessment of current clinical practices, and determination of evidence gaps, research needs were determined as follows:
1)
Conduct prospective epidemiological studies of the in-
cidence, prevalence, and burden of untreated BPPV among older adults.
2)
Conduct prospective diagnostic
cohort studies to deter-
mine the sensitivity, specificity,
and predictive values for the Dix-Hallpike maneuvers in the diagnosis of posterior
canal BPPV. Such studies should also deter- mine the latency duration and
duration of subjective vertigo and objective nystagmus with the maneuver.
Diagnostic cohort studies should be extended to non- specialist environments
including the primary care and emergency department settings.
3)
Conduct prospective diagnostic
cohort studies to deter-
mine the sensitivity, specificity,
and predictive values for the supine roll test for lateral canal BPPV. Diag-
nostic cohort study should be extended to nonspecialty environments including
the primary care and emer- gency department settings.
4) Conduct diagnostic and cost-effectiveness
studies to identify which subsets of patients, according to specific
history or physical
examination findings, should
be submitted for additional vestibular testing and/or radio- graphic imaging
in the setting of presumed
BPPV.
5)
Conduct diagnostic and cost-effectiveness studies
eval- uating the utility and costs of audiometry in the diag- nostic evaluation of BPPV.
6)
Determine whether education
and application of clini-
cal diagnostic criteria for BPPV will change physician behavior in terms of anticipated decreases
in ordering of diagnostic tests.
7)
Define the natural
history of untreated
posterior canal BPPV and
lateral canal BPPV to determine proper endpoints for clinical trials and follow-up
assessments.
8)
Determine the optimal
number of CRPs and the time
interval between performances of CRP for patients with posterior canal BPPV.
9)
Conduct RCTs of CRP for posterior canal BPPV with emphasis on 1) larger sample sizes,
2) (faster) time to resolution of symptoms with CRP rather than resolu- tion of
symptoms at a set endpoint in time, 3) trials in the primary care and/or emergency department settings, and 4) outcomes such as quality of life, return to
work, reduced fall risk.
10) Conduct
RCTs of PRMs for lateral
canal BPPV to determine the effectiveness of proposed
treatments. Time to resolution rather than resolution at a fixed endpoint should also be emphasized.
11)
Conduct RCTs comparing
PRMs to vestibular rehabil-
itation including comparisons among different vestib- ular rehabilitation options.
12)
Conduct cost-effectiveness studies for the potential ad- vantages of earlier intervention based
on earlier diag- nosis and earlier symptom resolution with expedient PRMs for
BPPV. Both direct health care and global economic costs require assessment.
14) Conduct studies on the functional impact of BPPV as
they relate to home safety, work safety and absences, and driving
risks.
15) Conduct epidemiological studies
on the rates of falls with BPPV as an underlying cause/diagnosis.
16) Develop and validate
a disease-specific quality-of-life measure for BPPV to assess treatment
outcomes.