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The video head impulse test

Acta Oto-Laryngologica, 2014
Additional research is needed to validate the importance of the video head impulse tests (vHIT), but it provides an important contribution to the evaluation of anterior and posterior semicircular canal disorders.To share observations of the vHIT test in clinical neurotology and to discuss the significance of the study findings.This study comprised 200 ...
Pedro Luiz, Mangabeira Albernaz   +1 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Video Head Impulse Testing

2019
The bedside head impulse, first described nearly 20 years ago, is the single most useful clinical test of the human vestibulo-ocular reflex (VOR). The video head impulse test (vHIT), its laboratory counterpart, now enables the objective assessment of the VOR.
Miriam S, Welgampola   +2 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Genç yetişkinlerde video head impulse test normalizasyonu

Turkish Journal of Audiology And Hearing Research, 2023
ÖzetAmaç: Video Head Impulse Test(v-HIT), uygulanması kolay, objektif, altı semisirküler kanalın (SSK) değerlendirilmesine ve vestibülo-oküler refleks (VOR) sırasında meydana gelen gizli sakkadların görülmesine olanak sağlayan bir testtir. Çalışmanın amacı, 18-30 yaş arasındaki sağlıklı bireylerden elde edilen v-HIT verileri ile VOR kazancı normatif ...
DEMİRTAŞ, Beyza   +3 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Head Impulse Testing Using Video‐oculography

Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 2009
Head impulses are a routine clinical test of semicircular canal function. At the bedside, they are used to detect malfunctioning of the horizontal semicircular canals. So far, 3‐D‐search‐coil recording is required to reliably test anterior and posterior canal function and to determine the gain of the vestibulo‐ocular reflex (VOR). Search‐coil recording
Klaus, Bartl   +3 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Head Impulse Test Paradigm and Suppression Head Impulse Test Paradigm in Individuals With and Without Motion Sickness

American Journal of Audiology, 2021
Purpose This study aimed to assess the vestibuloocular reflex (VOR) gain using both the Head Impulse Test Paradigm (HIMP) and Suppressive Head Impulse Test Paradigm (SHIMP) in individuals with motion sickness. Method Fifty eight participants (58 females) in the age range of 18–25 ...
Rakesh T, Kumar, Sujeet Kumar, Sinha
openaire   +2 more sources

Acute vestibular syndrome: clinical head impulse test versus video head impulse test

Journal of Neurology, 2018
HINTS battery involving head impulse test (HIT), nystagmus, and test of skew is the critical bedside examination to differentiate acute unilateral peripheral vestibulopathy from posterior circulation stroke (PCS) in acute vestibular syndrome (AVS). The highest sensitivity component of the battery has been reported to be the horizontal HIT, whereas skew
openaire   +3 more sources

[Electronystagmography of sudden head impulses (head-only impulsive rotational testing, head thrust test, head impulse test)].

Anales otorrinolaringologicos ibero-americanos, 1999
The basis of the head-thrust test is when a head thrust is done in the horizontal plane, the ipsilateral semicircular canal is the only which gets the gaze stabilization, being the other HSC completely inhibited. In this paper are investigated the ENG records according the test and analyzed the main parameters obtained.
M, Oliva   +2 more
openaire   +1 more source

A clinical evaluation of head impulse testing

Clinical Otolaryngology and Allied Sciences, 1998
The head impulse test is a simple clinical test comprising high acceleration head rotation. In the presence of a severe unilateral vestibular weakness the normal vestibulo-ocular reflex is replaced by a misalignment of the eye followed by a series of corrective saccades which are evident to the examiner. Previous reports have shown the high sensitivity
G J, Beynon, P, Jani, D M, Baguley
openaire   +2 more sources

Horizontal head impulse test detects gentamicin vestibulotoxicity

Neurology, 2009
Parenteral antibiotic therapy with gentamicin, even in accepted therapeutic doses, can occasionally cause bilateral vestibular loss (BVL) due to hair cell toxicity.To quantify in patients with gentamicin vestibulotoxicity (GVT) the extent of acceleration gain deficit of the horizontal vestibulo-ocular reflex at different accelerations with a graded ...
K P, Weber   +5 more
openaire   +2 more sources

The functional head impulse test: preliminary data

Journal of Neurology, 2018
The functional head impulse test is a new test of vestibular function based on the ability to recognize the orientation of a Landolt C optotype that briefly appears on a computer screen during passive head impulses imposed by the examiner over a range of head accelerations.
Corallo, Giulia   +4 more
openaire   +3 more sources

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