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      Benign positional vertigo: clinical and oculographic features in 240 cases.

      Neurology
      Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Child, Craniocerebral Trauma, complications, Electronystagmography, Eye Movements, Female, Humans, Labyrinthitis, Male, Middle Aged, Posture, Retrospective Studies, Vertigo, etiology, physiopathology

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          Abstract

          We report the clinical and oculographic features in 240 patients with benign positional vertigo (BPV). In each case, after a rapid position change from the sitting to head-hanging position, a stereotyped torsional paroxysmal positional nystagmus was visually observed and recorded with electronystagmography (ENG). The mean age of onset was 54 years, with a range of 11 to 84 years. In slightly more than one-half of the cases (122/240) a likely diagnosis was determined. The most common identifiable causes were head trauma (17%) and viral neurolabyrinthitis (15%). Females outnumbered males approximately two to one in the idiopathic group. Abnormalities on bithermal caloric testing were found in 47% of patients. Only two patients, both with well-documented neurologic disorders, had central signs on ENG. Our data are consistent with a peripheral, posterior semicircular canal origin of BPV.

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