vestibular migrain

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    Vestibular Migraine

    Matthew Yantis, MD

    Faculty Mentors: Dayton Young, M.D. and

    Tamoko Makishima, M.D., Ph.D.

    The University of Texas Medical Branch (UTMB Health)

    Department of Otolaryngology

    Grand Rounds Presentation

    May 22, 2013

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    Objectives

    • Demonstrate the relevance of a primarily neurologic

    diagnosis for an otolaryngologist

    • Provide guidelines from which to conclude that a

    patient likely has vestibular migraine

    • Provide a differential diagnosis for diseases with

    similar symptomatology

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    Outline

    1. Terminology

    2. Epidemiology

    3. Pathophysiology

    4. Symptomatology

    5. Testing

    6. Differential

    7. Treatment

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    Terminology

    • Vestibular Migraine• Migraine Vestibulopathy

    • Migrainous Vertigo•  Migraine Dizziness

    •  Migraine-Related Vertigo•  Migraine-Associated Vertigo

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    Entities Distinct from VM

    • Basilar Migraine

    • Meniere’s Disease

    • Benign Paroxysmal Positional Vertigo (BPPV)

    • Benign Recurrent Vertigo of Childhood

    • Episodic Ataxia (Type 2)

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    What is VM?

    •  A manifestation of migraine -- not a distinct entity

    • Vestibular center (peripheral or central) disturbedbefore, during, or after migraine

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    Epidemiology

    • Migraines

    • Prevalence: 10% of population

    • 11-17% of women, 4-6% of men

    • 20% of women 30-49 years old

    • Dizziness (vertigo and non-vestibular)

    • 23-29% of population

    • By chance (based on above): 3-4% have both symptoms

    Using stricter criteria, vertigo w/ migraine ~ 1% population

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    Pathophysiology of Migraines

    Mostly theoretical

    Theories include

    • Vasospasm

    • Cortical Spreading Depression

    • Ion Channel Disorderhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yZr9Joe85wg

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    Pathophys- Vasospasm

    http://www.migrelief.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/07/Science-Revised.png

    • Historical theory of origin

    of pain (trigeminal

    innervation of meninges)

    Linked to auras as well(hypoxia)

    VM Theory

    Vasospasm of AICA

    transmitted to internal

    auditory artery

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    VM Theory- Vasospasm

    Migraine vasospasm

    AICA

    Trigger Event

    Internal auditory artery

    Vestibular branches

    Vestibular dysfunction

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    Cortical Spreading Depression

    • Proposed

    mechanism for

    auras and pain

    • Vestibular

    processing

    centers affected

    may causevertigo (central)

    http://migrainetreatment.ecoffeeonline.com/migraine-in-children/

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    Pathophys: Ion Channels

    • Propranolol (BB) , Verapamil (CCB)

    • Mutations of CACNA1A (Ca channel)

    found in familial hemiplegic migraine(FHM1) and episodic ataxia type 2 (EA-2)

    • Could classic migraine or vestibular migraine have a

    defective Calcium channel?

    • Link not found yet

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    What are the symptoms?

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    Clinical Symptoms

    • Vertigo

    • Migraine headaches

    • Nausea/vomiting/motion sickness

    • Photophobia/phonophobia

    • Visual or other auras (e.g. scotomas, tingling sensation,auditory hallucinations)

    • Tinnitus, temporary hearing loss*

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    What is “Dizziness” 

    • Vertigo = sensation of spinning or circular movement

    • Oscillopsia

    • Light-headedness

    • Mental fog/lack of clarity

    • Imbalance

    • Causes: vestibular, psychogenic,

    cardiac (orthostatic), CNS origin (TIA),drug related, psychogenic

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    VM Symptoms- Vertigo

    • Duration: seconds to weeks (commonly minutes to hours)

    • Most often spontaneous (i.e. non-positional), but can be positional or due

    to head motion intolerance *

    • Rotational

    • May be caused by visual stimuli (car chase scenes, repeating patterns onrugs)

    • Definition of giddiness: adj; affected with vertigo, dizzy; Also, frivolous and

    lighthearted

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    Vertigo Duration

    Most common, based on Neuhauser et al. (2001)

    - Seconds to minutes: 18%

    - 5-60 minutes: 33%

    - 1-24 hrs: 21%

    - >24hrs: 2%

    - From 33 patients deemed to meet “definite VM” criteria 

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    Symptoms

    33 patient’s symptoms breakdown during vertigo 

    • Photophotobia (70%)

    •Phonophobia (64%)

    • Visual and other aura (36%)

    • Headache (94%) 2 patients without headache

    Always HA (45%), Sometimes HA (48%) Neuhauser et al 2001

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    Symptoms

    • Picture of Table –  Neuhauser and Lempert –  

    •  Eggers 223

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    What Tests To Run?

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    Don’t Forget..... 

    Look in the...

    &

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    Testing

    • Specific exam tests: Dix-Hallpike, Vestibulo-ocular reflex, Romberg

    • Battery of other tests: audiogram, ABR, VEMP, video-oculography/VNG, water calorics

    • Some relevant findings on nystagmography

    • MRI when still unsure

    •  Goal: primarily rule out other

    identifiable causes of vertigo

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    Testing- Nystagmus

    Video-oculography of 20 VM patients (von Brevern et. al 2005)

    • Found pathological spontaneous and positional nystagmus in 70% of pts during acute VM attack

    • Spontaneous (central origin) or positional (peripheral origin)

    • 70% also had positive Romberg

    *No hearing loss noted

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    http://work.thaslwanter.at/Projects/Images/Thomas_and_VOG.jpg

    http://mozyrko.pl/2009/10/08/eye-tracking-odmiany-rozne-metody-pomiaru/

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    Diagnosis of VM

    • No official agreed upon criteria

    • Difficult: no pathognomonic exam signs, no

     biomarkers, no lab tests, lots of symptom overlap

    • Only diagnostic criteria that includes “vertigo” as a

    symptom is the International Headache Society’s

    criteria for basilar type migraine• Important to try to rule out other causes of vertigo

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    Diagnosis

    • Picture of Table –  Neuhauser and Lempert –  

    •  Eggers 223

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    Differential Diagnosis

    Basilar migraine

    Meniere’s Disease 

    Benign Paroxysmal Positional Vertigo

    And many more!

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    Basilar migraine

    • What it is:

    • Subtype of migraine (usuallyoccipital pain)

    •Sx’s = vertigo (60%), ataxia, parasthesias, dysarthria

    • Why it’s not VM:

    • BM diagnosis criteria requires at least two  posteriorcirculation symptoms, lasting 5-60 minutes, and

    immediately followed by a migraine

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    IHS II- Basilar migraine

    Diagnostic criteria:

    A. At least 2 attacks fulfilling criteria B-D

    B. Aura   consisting of at least two of the following fully reversible symptoms, but no motor weakness:

    1. dysarthria

    2. vertigo

    3. tinnitus

    4. hypacusia5. diplopia

    6. visual symptoms simultaneously in both temporal and nasal fields of both eyes

    7. ataxia

    8. decreased level of consciousness

    9. simultaneously bilateral paraesthesias

    C. At least one of the following:

    1. at least one aura symptom develops gradually over ≥5 minutes and/or different aurasymptoms occur in succession over ≥5 minutes 

    2. each aura symptom lasts ≥5 and ≤60 minutes 

    D. Headache fulfilling criteria B-D for 1.1 Migraine without aura  begins during the aura or follows aura

    within 60 minutes

    E. Not attributed to another disorder 1  http://ihs-classification.org/en/02_klassifikation/02_teil1/01.02.06_migraine.html

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    Meniere’s Disease 

    • What is it:

    • Vertigo episodes lasting 20 min to 24 hrs with often

    unilateral hearing sx’s including tinnitus and hearingfluctuation/loss (low frequency)

    • Why it’s not VM:

    • Hearing loss is possible with VM, but typically does notprogress to profound.

    • Permanence of hearing loss

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    VM vs Meniere’s: Reality 

    • Significant overlap, making diagnosis difficult

    • Prevelance of migraine in Meniere’s patient 

    •Migraine symptoms like aura up to 45% Meniere’spatients experience during vertigo (Radke et al. 2002)

    • Lempert et al. (2013) if criteria for Meniere’s met

    (audiogram), should diagnose as Meniere’s (notVM)

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    BPPV

    • What it is:

    • Peripheral vertigo due to canaliths

    misplaced in the semicircular canals

    •Why it’s not VM:• Often Dix-Hallpike is normal in VM

    • Vertigo is shorter duration and more frequent episodes

    • VM has earlier onset in life

    • Positional nystagmus is persistent (no fatigue)

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    How Can We Treat It?

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    Treatment

    • Classic migraine treatment

    • Abortive methods

    Prophylaxis• Symptomatic (e.g N/V)

    • Trigger avoidance

    • Vestibular migraine-specific treatment

    • Physical therapy

    • Limited drug trials (zolmitriptan, topiramate)

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    Treat- Abortive

    • Triptans (sumatriptan, rizatriptan)

    • Zolmitriptan vs placebo in treating specifically VM in

    10 patients

     inconclusive (Neuhauser et al. 2003)

    • Combo pills:

    • Fioricet (butalbital, acetaminophen, caffeine)

    • Fiorinal (butalbital, aspirin, caffeine)

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    Treat- Prophylaxis

    • Antihypertensives: BB’s ( propranolol, metoprolol,

    atenolol), CCB’s (verapamil) 

    • Antidepressants: TCAs (nortriptyline)

    • Anticonvulsants: topiramate, lamotrigine

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    Treat- Symptoms

    Nausea--> suppress the vestibular system

    • promethazine, ondansetron (antiemetics)

    • dimenhydrinate, meclizine (antihistamines)

    •  benzodiazepines (short course)

    • metoclopramide *

    Phono/photophobia  removal of stimuli

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    Treat- Triggers

    • Avoidance is the key!

    • Symptom diary

    • Dietary modifications• Avoid: caffeine, alcohol

    • Situational/environmental

    • Hormonal: menstrual cycles

    Weather changes• Lack of sleep, dehydration, stress

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    Kramer 2013

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    Cherchi and Hain 2011

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    Treat- Physical Therapy

    • Found to be effective specifically for VM

    Whitney et al. (2000); retrospective case series of 39 pts

    • Initial vestibular functioning testing before rehab

    • Treated with vestibular rehab (strength/stretching, habituation,

     balance/gait training)

    • Completed questionnaires pre- and post treatment (symptomseverity rating 0-100, dizziness handicap inventory, dynamic

    gait index, # of falls)

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    Treat- PT

    Results: Pre-treatment

    - 81% patients presented with abnormal vestibular

    testing in at least one vestibular test

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    Treatment- PT

    Results

    - Statistically significant improvements in almost all categories of physical

    performance/perceived abilities

    - # of patients report more than one fall in past four weeks decreased by 78%

    - Severity rating (0-100): 15 pts rated symptoms as less severe at discharge, 6

    rated higher, 1 unchanged, and 11 w/ baseline score of 0 that did not increase

     by discharge

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    Treatment- PT

    Conclusion- Offer vestibular rehab to patients with VM

    - 35/39 patient had improved scores

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    Summary- VM

    • Common manifestation of migraine and common

    cause of vertigo

    • Still not well defined as a specific disease process

    • No consensus on diagnosis

    • Treatment mostly for migraine (triggers, abortive

    and prophylactic meds, physical therapy)

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    What Happens Next

    • Need accepted diagnostic criteria

    • Will require better pathophys understanding

    2014

     criteria for VM supposed to be published in theIHS’s International Classification of Headache

    Disorders

    • Without better understanding of disease, may be

    inappropriate to establish criteria to diagnose as astand-alone disease process

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    http://www.migraine-aura.org/content/e24966/e22874/e23697/index_en.html

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    Bibliography

    • Baloh. Neurotology of migraine. Headache 37:615-621, 2002.

    • Brackman, Shelton, Arriaga: Otologic Surgery 3rd edition.

    • Brevern et al. Acute migrainous vertigo: clinical and oculographic findings. Brain 128:365-374, 2005.

    • Cha et al. Migraine associated vertigo. Journal of Clinical Neurology 3:121-126, 2007.

    • Cherchi and Hain. Migraine-associated vertigo. Otolaryngology Clinic Of North America 44:367-375,

    2011.

    • Cherian. Vertigo as a migraine phenomenon. Curr Neurol Neurosci Rep 13:343-349, 2013.

    Cohen et al. Migraine and Vestibular Symptoms — Identifying ClinicalFeatures That Predict “VestibularMigraine”. Headache 51:1393-1397, 2011.

    • Eggers. Migraine-related vertigo: diagnosis and treatment. Current Pain and Headache Reports 11:217-

    226, 2007.

    • Glasscock-Shambaugh: Surgery of The Ear

    • IHS Webite http://ihsclassification.org/en/02_klassifikation/02_teil1/01.02.06_migraine.html

    • Lempert and Neuhauser. Migrainous vertigo. Neurol Clin 23:715-730, 2005.

    • Lempert et al. Vestibular migraine: Diagnostic criteria. Journal of Vestibular Research 2012; 22: 167-172

    • Neuhauser H, Leopold M, von Brevern M, et al. The interrelations of migraine, vertigo, and migrainous

    vertigo. Neurology 2001; 56(4):436-41• Peter Weber: Vertigo and disequilibrium: A practical guide to diagnosis and management

    • Porta-etessam et al. Neuro-otological symptoms in patients with migraine. Neurologia 26:100-104, 2011.

    • Thomas Brandt: Vertigo and Dizziness: Common complaints

    • Whitney et al. Physical therapy for migraine-related vestibulopathy and vestibular dysfunction with

    history of migraine. Laryngoscope 110:1528- 1534, 2000.