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Is benign paroxysmal positional vertigo
underdiagnosed in hospitalised patients?
TP Chan TWGHs Wong Tai Sin Hospital, 124
Shatin Pass Road, Kowloon, Hong Kong
OBJECTIVES. To investigate the proportion of sufferers of benign paroxysmal
positional vertigo among hospitalised patients in Hong Kong,
who complained of dizziness, and to determine the predictive
values and likelihood ratios of classical presenting symptoms.
DESIGN. Cross-sectional study.
SETTING. Convalescence/rehabilitation hospital, Hong Kong.
PATIENTS. A cohort of 88 newly admitted patients, who complained of
dizziness or complained of having had dizziness in the 2 weeks
prior to admission from September 2005 to February 2006.
MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES. Presence of the pathognomonic nystagmus of benign paroxysmal
positional vertigo.
RESULTS. Five patients had benign paroxysmal positional vertigo, all with
the posterior type. The frequency of its occurrence among
patients complaining of dizziness was 6% (95% confidence
interval, 1-11%), which was more than double the figure of
3% in our local convalescence/rehabilitation hospitals, though
this difference was not statistically significant. Regarding the
five identified patients, in two it involved the left ear, in two
others the right ear, and in one it was bilateral. All four classical
presenting symptoms had low positive predictive values, high
negative predictive values, and small likelihood ratios.
CONCLUSION. Benign paroxysmal positional vertigo in the setting of a
convalescence/rehabilitation hospital in Hong Kong seems to
be underdiagnosed. Small and insignificant likelihood ratios for
the classical presenting symptoms preclude their use in making
the diagnosis. However, absence of these symptoms in a clinical
setting of low occurrence rate can be regarded as against the
diagnosis.
Hong Kong Med J 2008;14:Epub 2008 Apr 3
Key words: Prevalence; Sensitivity and specificity;
Vertigo
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