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Original Article

Vestibulo-ocular function in patients with sporadic ataxia

ORCID Icon, , , ORCID Icon, &
Pages 140-144 | Published online: 21 Jul 2018
 

Abstract

Objective: To identify vestibular alterations in patients with sporadic ataxia (SA).

Materials and methods: A retrospective, cross-sectional study was carried out. Eleven patients, four females and seven males, 35–58 years of age (mean age, 46.6 ± 8 years) were evaluated, and they underwent the following procedures: anamnesis, otorhinolaryngological assessment to exclude any kind of middle ear impairments that may hinder exam results, and vestibular evaluation to verify the existence of vestibular disorders, kind and site of the lesion. Significance criterion by comparing the result of the vestibular screening (analysing normal and altered results) was p < .05.

Results: Clinically, patients evidenced greater occurrence of gait imbalance (81.8%), dysarthria (63.8%) and dysphagia (54.5%). Dizziness was reported in 45.4% of the cases. In the vestibular testing, prevalence of alterations occurred in the caloric test (54.5%), in the rotation test (45.5%), and in the search for gaze and optokinetic nystagmus (27.3%, each). The presence of testing alteration was observed in 73% of the patients, central vestibular disorder was the greatest occurrence in 64% of the exams.

Conclusions: Vestibular function disorder occurred in 73% of the patients, detected in the caloric test, central vestibular system disorder, deficit kind, was prevalent. The high number of alterations, diagnosed in the test, point to the relevance of the labyrinth screening in this rare kind of ataxia, and evidence the importance of patients’ early diagnosis and follow-up.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

Ethics approval and participation consent

This study was approved by the Ethics Committee on Research Involving Human Subjects (registration number at CEP 832.502/2014) at Brazil Plataform. All examinations were performed after formal consent forms were obtained from all participants.

Additional information

Funding

This study is supported by financial support from CNPq (National Council of Scientific and Technological Development), Brazil - Registration number: 301795/2015-0.

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