Post Cochlear Implantation Vertigo: Ictal Nystagmus and Audiovestibular Test Characteristics

Otol Neurotol. 2024 Jan 1;45(1):65-74. doi: 10.1097/MAO.0000000000004037. Epub 2023 Oct 14.

Abstract

Objective: To investigate ictal nystagmus and audiovestibular characteristics in episodic spontaneous vertigo after cochlear implantation (CI).

Study design: Retrospective and prospective case series.

Patients: Twenty-one CI patients with episodic spontaneous vertigo after implantation were recruited.

Interventions: Patient-initiated home video-oculography recordings were performed during one or more attacks of vertigo, using miniature portable home video-glasses. To assess canal and otolith function, video head-impulse tests (vHITs) and vestibular-evoked myogenic potential tests were conducted.

Main outcome measures: Nystagmus slow-phase velocities (SPVs), the presence of horizontal direction-changing nystagmus, and post-CI audiovestibular tests.

Results: Main final diagnoses were post-CI secondary endolymphatic hydrops (48%) and exacerbation of existing Ménière's disease (29%). Symptomatic patients demonstrated high-velocity horizontal ictal-nystagmus (SPV, 44.2°/s and 68.2°/s in post-CI secondary endolymphatic hydrop and Ménière's disease). Direction-changing nystagmus was observed in 80 and 75%. Two were diagnosed with presumed autoimmune inner ear disease (SPV, 6.6°/s and 172.9°/s). One patient was diagnosed with probable vestibular migraine (15.1°/s).VHIT gains were 0.80 ± 0.20 (lateral), 0.70 ± 0.17 (anterior), and 0.62 ± 0.27 (posterior) in the implanted ear, with abnormal values in 33, 35, and 35% of each canal. Bone-conducted cervical and ocular vestibular-evoked myogenic potentials were asymmetric in 52 and 29% of patients (all lateralized to the implanted ear) with mean asymmetry ratios of 51.2 and 35.7%. Reversible reduction in vHIT gain was recorded in three acutely symptomatic patients.

Conclusion: High-velocity, direction-changing nystagmus time-locked with vertigo attacks may be observed in post-CI implant vertigo and may indicate endolymphatic hydrops. Fluctuating vHIT gain may be an additional marker of a recurrent peripheral vestibulopathy.

MeSH terms

  • Cochlear Implantation*
  • Endolymphatic Hydrops*
  • Humans
  • Meniere Disease* / complications
  • Nystagmus, Pathologic* / diagnosis
  • Nystagmus, Pathologic* / etiology
  • Retrospective Studies
  • Vertigo / complications
  • Vertigo / diagnosis
  • Vestibular Neuronitis* / complications