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Page 1: Vertigo
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Vertigo

• Vertigo is best suited to describe a precise type of dizziness

• A hallucination of movement involving one- self (subjective vertigo) or the surrounding environment (objective vertigo) that is apt to occur when there is an acute interruption of vestibular pathways

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• Of all the human vestibular pathways, the VOR most important required to maintain a stable retinal image with active head movement.

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• Electrical activity generated within the inner ear travels along the vestibular nerve (primary afferent neuronal pathway) central vestibular nuclei of the brainstem second-order neuronal pathways that become the vestibulo-ocular reflex (VOR), the vestibulospinal tracts, and the vestibulo- cerebellar tracts.

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BPPV

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BPPV

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Meniere

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Vestibular Neuronitis

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• Benign paroxysmal positional vertigo (BPPV) is a clinical syndrome characterized by brief recurrent episodes of vertigo triggered by changes in head position with respect to gravity.

• most cases of BPPV affect the posterior canal.

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Labyrinthitis