Benign Paroxysmal Positional Vertigo

Last updated by Peer reviewed by Dr Colin Tidy, MRCGP
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Benign paroxysmal positional vertigo (BPPV) is the most common cause of vertigo which is experienced as the illusion of movement. Symptoms are due to inner ear dysfunction. Otoliths become detached from the macula (the utricle-based receptor for detecting head position and movement) into the semicircular canals. These are affected differentially due to anatomy[1] :

  • Posterior semicircular canal - 85-95% of patients.
  • Inferior semicircular canal - 5-15% of patients.
  • Anterior semicircular canals - very rare.

Hair cells embedded in otoliths are stimulated as they are pulled/pushed by the flow of endolymph through the semicircular canals following head movement and terminate as movement ceases. Detached otoliths may continue to move after the head has stopped moving and vertigo results from the conflicting sensation of ongoing movement with other sensory inputs.

Most BPPV is idiopathic but causes can be attributed in about 40% and include[1] :

  • Head injury.
  • Spontaneous degeneration of the labyrinth.
  • Post-viral illness (viral neuronitis).
  • Complication of stapes surgery.
  • Chronic middle ear disease.
  • BPPV is common. The lifetime prevalence of BPPV is around 2.9%[2] .
  • BPPV can affect people of any age but commonly presents at around 50 years of age. Younger people may develop BPPV as a consequence of head trauma. Women are affected twice as often as men[1] .

Risk factors

  • Older age - onset is most common between 40 and 60 years.
  • It is more common in women (male:female ratio 1:2).
  • Ménière's disease (co-diagnosis in up to 30%).
  • Anxiety disorders[3] .
  • Migraine[4] , particularly in children[5] .

History

  • Those affected by BPPV endure episodes of vertigo provoked by head movements (such as entailed in rolling over in bed, lying down, sitting up, leaning forward or turning the head in a horizontal plane).
  • Patients often volunteer that symptoms are worse when the head is tilted to one particular side.
  • Attacks are of sudden onset and usually last 20-30 seconds with rapid resolution if the head is kept still.
  • There is normally a brief latent period (usually about 5 seconds but may be up to 20 seconds) between the provocative movement and the experience of vertigo.
  • Nausea is common but vomiting is rare[1] .
  • Symptoms are typically worse in the mornings.
  • Hearing is not affected and tinnitus is not a feature. Symptoms such as hearing loss, tinnitus, ear or mastoid pain, headache and photophobia point towards alternative diagnoses.
  • Light-headedness and imbalance are sometimes reported after the attack and may last for several minutes or hours[1] .
  • BPPV may present as a fall. In one study, 54% of patients admitted to hospital following a fall and suitable for assessment were found to have BPPV[6] .

Examination

Clinical examination should include:

  • Assessment of the external ear and tympanic membrane (excluding cholesteatoma and vesicles suggestive of herpes zoster oticus).
  • Cranial nerve examination for evidence of palsies and hearing loss.

Conditions causing vertigo and nystagmus include:

Beware 'red flags' such as unilateral hearing loss or tinnitus, new-onset headache, focal neurological signs or cerebellar signs including gait ataxia, down-beating or other atypical nystagmus. These suggest more serious causes of vertigo and should prompt rapid specialist referral.

The Hallpike (or Dix-Hallpike) manoeuvre can be used to check for BPPV in adults with vertigo on head movement. To carry out the manoeuvre:

  • Advise the person that they may experience transient vertigo during the procedure.
  • Ask the person to keep their eyes open throughout the manoeuvre and to look straight ahead.
  • Ask the person to sit upright on the couch with their head turned 45° to one side.
  • From this position, lay the person down rapidly (over 2 seconds), supporting their head and neck, until their head is extended 20-30° over the end of the couch with the chin pointing slightly upwards and the test ear downwards. Support the head to maintain this position for at least 30 seconds.
  • Observe their eyes closely for up to 30 seconds for the development of nystagmus. If nystagmus is present, maintain the position for its duration (maximum 2 minutes if persistent) and note its duration, type, direction and latency.

NB: be cautious if the person has a neck or back problem, or cardiovascular problems such as carotid sinus syncope, as it involves turning the head and extending the neck. If in doubt about the safety of the manoeuvre, seek specialist advice or refer the person to a medically qualified balance specialist (such as an ear, nose, and throat specialist or an audiovestibular physician).

A positive result is one that provokes vertigo and torsional (rotatory) upbeating nystagmus (the upper pole of the eye beats towards the dependent ear with the vertical component towards the forehead when looking straight ahead). Left-ear BPPV has a clockwise torsional nystagmus; right-ear BPPV nystagmus rotates anti-clockwise. There is a latent period (usually of 5-20 seconds) between completing the manoeuvre and onset of vertigo and nystagmus. The vertigo and nystagmus increase in intensity, then decline, but should resolve within one minute of nystagmus onset. Less intense nystagmus in the opposite direction may occur for a short time on sitting upright. If the Dix-Hallpike manoeuvre is negative, repeat in one week. Generally with BPPV, only one side should test positive during the Dix-Hallpike test. Bilateral posterior semicircular canal BPPV is possible but unlikely and points towards horizontal canal involvement, vestibular neuritis or a central cause.

If BPPV is confirmed, treatment to relieve it using a canalith repositioning manoeuvre can be given. Use of the Hallpike manoeuvre can reduce unnecessary investigation or referrals for specialist assessment. However, neuroimaging (CT or MRI scan) is indicated where there is diagnostic uncertainty.

General

Where BPPV has been diagnosed as the cause of a patient's vertigo:

  • Advise that symptoms are usually self-limiting over several weeks but may recur. In one small trial, 36% of patients had a recurrence within 48 months[7] .
  • Limit symptoms by getting out of bed slowly and reducing head movements.
  • Offer a period of observation or immediate treatment (usually Epley's manoeuvre or Brandt-Daroff exercises).
  • Consider safety:
    • Advise the person not to drive when dizzy or if driving might provoke an attack of vertigo.
    • In the UK, the DVLA must be notified if someone is liable to 'sudden and unprovoked or unprecipitated episodes of disabling giddiness', and driving is only permitted when satisfactory control of symptoms is achieved[8] . However, experts suggest that, in general, BPPV is neither unprovoked nor unprecipitated.
    • Advise the patient to inform employers where vertigo may pose an occupational hazard (eg, working at heights, with machinery, driving).
    • Discuss measures to reduce the risk of falls.
  • Follow-up should be in four weeks to check symptom resolution.
  • Referral to a specialist is appropriate where:
    • Epley's manoeuvre cannot be provided in local primary care.
    • Epley's manoeuvre has been performed and repeated without symptoms abating.
    • The diagnosis is not certain.
    • Symptoms and signs haven't resolved after four weeks.
    • There have been three or more recurrences of vertigo.

Repositioning techniques

Epley's manoeuvre
This is the most widely used repositioning manoeuvre for BPPV. Its aim is to reposition otoliths back into the utricles from the posterior semicircular canals. A Cochrane review concluded that it is a safe, effective treatment for posterior BPPV (number needed to treat 2-4)[7] ; outcomes are similar for Epley or Brandt-Daroff exercises[9] .

In a retrospective study, 47% of patients obtained symptomatic control of BPPV after a single Epley manoeuvre; 84% experienced symptomatic improvement after three manoeuvres[10] .

To perform Epley's manoeuvre[11] :

  • Sit the patient upright on the couch with their head turned 45° to the affected side (the side that tested positive using the Dix-Hallpike test).
  • Place your hands on either side of the patient's head and guide the patient to lie down with the head dependent 30° over the edge of the couch (the same as in the Dix-Hallpike test). Wait for at least 30 seconds to a minute.
  • Rotate their head 90° to the opposite side with the patient's face upward with the head remaining dependent.
  • Roll the patient on to their side whilst holding their head in this position and then rotate the head so that it is facing downwards (tell the patient to look to the ground).
  • Sit the patient up sideways while maintaining head rotation.
  • Simultaneously rotate the head to a central position. (There should be no nystagmus by this stage, if the procedure has been successful, as the otoliths should by now be repositioned.)

For success:

  • Whilst dependent, the head should be hanging over the edge of the couch at full neck extension. If a patient is unable to tolerate this, a couch can be used in the Trendelenburg position to simulate it.
  • Each position should be maintained until full resolution of symptoms and nystagmus has been achieved for at least 30 seconds.
  • There is evidence supporting a small additional beneficial effect of post-Epley postural restrictions (eg, upright head posture for 48 hours, avoiding lying on affected side for 2-7 days) in comparison to Epley's manoeuvre alone (NNT = 10)[12] .

Symptoms can improve quickly following treatment but full recovery can take days to several weeks. If symptoms have not settled by a week and the diagnosis of BPPV is highly likely, consider repeating Epley's manoeuvre.

There are also repositioning manoeuvres for horizontal canal BPPV (the 'barbecue' manoeuvre) and for anterior canal BPPV.

Self-treatment using Epley's manoeuvre: this can be taught to patients to perform at home using a pillow to support the shoulders, with the head resting on the bed, rather than over the side of the bed[13] . Many patients teach themselves from video-sharing websites[11] .

Brandt-Daroff exercises
These were developed as a series of home exercises to loosen and disperse inner ear debris. Tell the patient to:

  • Sit on the side of bed with their head rotated 45° to one side.
  • Close eyes to minimise vertigo.
  • Quickly lie down to the opposite side until the head touches the bed (if the head is turned to the left, lie on the right side), nose up and lateral occiput resting on the bed.
  • Stay in this position for 30 seconds then sit up.
  • Turn head to the other side and repeat on the opposite side.
  • One session should include six repetitions to each side; repeat three times daily until free of vertigo for at least two consecutive days.

Complications of repositioning manoeuvres include nausea (16.7-32%)[7] , vomiting, fainting and intolerable vertigo. Manoeuvres may be difficult in elderly or less mobile patients but they remain the most effective treatment available. Contra-indications are as for the Dix-Hallpike test (see 'Examination', above). Where symptoms persist despite attempts at repositioning manoeuvres, referral for further investigation and specialist re-evaluation should not be delayed.

Vestibular rehabilitation

There is evidence that vestibular rehabilitation is a safe, effective management for unilateral peripheral vestibular dysfunction and it resolves symptoms and improves functioning in the medium term. However, there is evidence that physical (repositioning) manoeuvres are more effective in the short term than exercise-based vestibular rehabilitation, although a combination of the two is effective for longer-term functional recovery[14] .

Medication

Avoid vestibular suppressant medications; they neither prevent the symptoms nor alter the natural history of the condition[12] .

Surgery

Surgery is very much regarded as an extreme last resort for intractable symptoms - denervating the posterior semicircular canal or obliterating it by laser (transmastoid) - but deafness is a risk.

The natural history for BPPV is for spontaneous remission but with a high chance of recurrence (approximately 50% at five years). Where the posterior semicircular canal is involved, approximately a third of patients' symptoms will remit within a week compared with a half of those with horizontal semicircular canal involvement, related to ease of self-clearing of debris into the utricle.

BPPV is considered 'benign' but may increase the risk of falls and injuries and make some occupations impossible - eg, airline pilot. Frequent episodes of vertigo may diminish quality of life; treatment is effective and the condition should be actively treated.

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Further reading and references

  1. Benign paroxysmal positional vertigo; NICE CKS, October 2017

  2. Palmeri R, Kumar A; Benign Paroxysmal Positional Vertigo

  3. Chen ZJ, Chang CH, Hu LY, et al; Increased risk of benign paroxysmal positional vertigo in patients with anxiety disorders: a nationwide population-based retrospective cohort study. BMC Psychiatry. 2016 Jul 1516:238. doi: 10.1186/s12888-016-0950-2.

  4. Chu CH, Liu CJ, Lin LY, et al; Migraine is associated with an increased risk for benign paroxysmal positional vertigo: a nationwide population-based study. J Headache Pain. 201516:62. doi: 10.1186/s10194-015-0547-z. Epub 2015 Jul 4.

  5. Ralli G, Atturo F, de Filippis C; Idiopathic benign paroxysmal vertigo in children, a migraine precursor. Int J Pediatr Otorhinolaryngol. 2009 Dec73 Suppl 1:S16-8.

  6. Abbott J, Tomassen S, Lane L, et al; Assessment for benign paroxysmal positional vertigo in medical patients admitted with falls in a district general hospital. Clin Med (Lond). 2016 Aug16(4):335-8. doi: 10.7861/clinmedicine.16-4-335.

  7. Hilton MP, Pinder DK; The Epley (canalith repositioning) manoeuvre for benign paroxysmal positional vertigo. Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2014 Dec 8(12):CD003162. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD003162.pub3.

  8. Assessing fitness to drive: guide for medical professionals; Driver and Vehicle Licensing Agency

  9. Cetin YS, Ozmen OA, Demir UL, et al; Comparison of the effectiveness of Brandt-Daroff Vestibular training and Epley Canalith repositioning maneuver in benign Paroxysmal positional vertigo long term result: A randomized prospective clinical trial. Pak J Med Sci. 2018 May-Jun34(3):558-563. doi: 10.12669/pjms.343.14786.

  10. Braschi E, Ross D, Korownyk C; Evaluating the Epley maneuver. Can Fam Physician. 2015 Oct61(10):878.

  11. Kerber KA, Burke JF, Skolarus LE, et al; A prescription for the Epley maneuver: www.youtube.com? Neurology. 2012 Jul 2479(4):376-80. doi: 10.1212/WNL.0b013e3182604533.

  12. Hunt WT, Zimmermann EF, Hilton MP; Modifications of the Epley (canalith repositioning) manoeuvre for posterior canal benign paroxysmal positional vertigo (BPPV). Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2012 Apr 184:CD008675. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD008675.pub2.

  13. Tanimoto H, Doi K, Katata K, et al; Self-treatment for benign paroxysmal positional vertigo of the posterior semicircular canal. Neurology. 2005 Oct 2565(8):1299-300.

  14. Hillier SL, McDonnell M; Vestibular rehabilitation for unilateral peripheral vestibular dysfunction. Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2011 Feb 16(2):CD005397.

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