TY - JOUR
T1 - History Taking in Non-Acute Vestibular Symptoms: A 4-Step Approach
AU - van de Berg, R.
AU - Kingma, H.
N1 - Funding Information:
Conflicts of Interest: This research received no external funding. There were no conflicts of interest regarding this topic. Both authors received research grants from the Dutch Government (ZonMw), Global Education Grant Skolkovo, Stichting Het Heinsius Houbolt Fonds, Stichting De Weijerhorst, Stichting Universiteitsfonds Limburg, University of Hasselt, Maastricht University Medical Center+ and Medel for research regarding bilateral vestibulopathy, the vestibular implant and BPPV. Both authors are also frequently invited as lecturers for Abbott, Natus, and UCB.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.
PY - 2021/12/1
Y1 - 2021/12/1
N2 - History taking is crucial in the diagnostic process for vestibular disorders. To facilitate the process, systems such as TiTrATE, SO STONED, and DISCOHAT have been used to describe the different paradigms; together, they address the most important aspects of history taking, viz. time course, triggers, and accompanying symptoms. However, multiple (vestibular) disorders may co-occur in the same patient. This complicates history taking, since the time course, triggers, and accompanying symptoms can vary, depending on the disorder. History taking can, therefore, be improved by addressing the important aspects of each co-occurring vestibular disorder separately. The aim of this document is to describe a 4-step approach for improving history taking in patients with non-acute vestibular symptoms, by guiding the clinician and the patient through the history taking process. It involves a systematic approach that explicitly identifies all co-occurring vestibular disorders in the same patient, and which addresses each of these vestibular disorders separately. The four steps are: (1) describing any attack(s) of vertigo and/or dizziness; (2) describing any chronic vestibular symptoms; (3) screening for functional, psychological, and psychiatric co-morbidity; (4) establishing a comprehensive diagnosis, including all possible co-occurring (vestibular) disorders. In addition, pearls and pitfalls will be discussed separately for each step.
AB - History taking is crucial in the diagnostic process for vestibular disorders. To facilitate the process, systems such as TiTrATE, SO STONED, and DISCOHAT have been used to describe the different paradigms; together, they address the most important aspects of history taking, viz. time course, triggers, and accompanying symptoms. However, multiple (vestibular) disorders may co-occur in the same patient. This complicates history taking, since the time course, triggers, and accompanying symptoms can vary, depending on the disorder. History taking can, therefore, be improved by addressing the important aspects of each co-occurring vestibular disorder separately. The aim of this document is to describe a 4-step approach for improving history taking in patients with non-acute vestibular symptoms, by guiding the clinician and the patient through the history taking process. It involves a systematic approach that explicitly identifies all co-occurring vestibular disorders in the same patient, and which addresses each of these vestibular disorders separately. The four steps are: (1) describing any attack(s) of vertigo and/or dizziness; (2) describing any chronic vestibular symptoms; (3) screening for functional, psychological, and psychiatric co-morbidity; (4) establishing a comprehensive diagnosis, including all possible co-occurring (vestibular) disorders. In addition, pearls and pitfalls will be discussed separately for each step.
KW - medical history taking
KW - dizziness
KW - vertigo
KW - vestibular diseases
KW - Meniere's disease
KW - benign paroxysmal positional vertigo
KW - migraine disorders
KW - vestibular neuronitis
KW - CRITERIA CONSENSUS DOCUMENT
KW - DIAGNOSTIC-CRITERIA
KW - CLASSIFICATION COMMITTEE
KW - BILATERAL VESTIBULOPATHY
KW - DIZZINESS
KW - DISORDERS
KW - VERTIGO
KW - KEYS
U2 - 10.3390/jcm10245726
DO - 10.3390/jcm10245726
M3 - Article
C2 - 34945023
SN - 2077-0383
VL - 10
JO - Journal of Clinical Medicine
JF - Journal of Clinical Medicine
IS - 24
M1 - 5726
ER -