2006
DOI: 10.1136/jnnp.2005.084624
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Positional nystagmus and vertigo due to a solitary brachium conjunctivum plaque

Abstract: The authors describe two patients suffering from demyelinating central nervous system disease who developed intense vertigo and downbeat nystagmus upon tilting their heads relative to gravity. Brain MRI revealed in both cases a single, small active lesion in the right brachium conjunctivum. The disruption of otolithic signals carried in brachium conjunctivum fibres connecting the fastigial nucleus with the vestibular nuclei is thought to be causatively involved, in agreement with a recently formulated model si… Show more

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Cited by 39 publications
(38 citation statements)
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“…CPN was purely vertical in 19 of the 40 (47.5%) patients (7,14,16,19,27,30), purely horizontal in 5 (12.5%) (7,18,34), purely torsional (rotatory) in 2 (5%) (12,34), and was a combination involving a downbeating component in 13 (32.5%) (7,17,30). Of the 40 (48.8%) participants with positive D-H, only 1 demonstrated nystagmus in the direction considered "typical" of BPPV (31).…”
Section: Dix-hallpikementioning
confidence: 99%
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“…CPN was purely vertical in 19 of the 40 (47.5%) patients (7,14,16,19,27,30), purely horizontal in 5 (12.5%) (7,18,34), purely torsional (rotatory) in 2 (5%) (12,34), and was a combination involving a downbeating component in 13 (32.5%) (7,17,30). Of the 40 (48.8%) participants with positive D-H, only 1 demonstrated nystagmus in the direction considered "typical" of BPPV (31).…”
Section: Dix-hallpikementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Of the 40 patients who had a positive D-H and reported the direction of nystagmus, 24 (60%) were reported to be positive to both left and right ear down positions (7,16,17,27,30,34), which changed the direction of the nystagmus in 15 (62.5%) (7,17,30,34).…”
Section: Dix-hallpikementioning
confidence: 99%
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