Presbyvestibulopathy: an uncommon cause of dizziness in the elderly
Tzu-Pu Chang, Yu-Hung Kuo, Anand K. Bery

TL;DR
This study finds that presbyvestibulopathy is rare in elderly patients with dizziness, and most have normal vestibular function.
Contribution
The study provides new insights into the prevalence and clinical relevance of presbyvestibulopathy in older adults.
Findings
Most patients aged ≥60 years had normal vestibular function despite dizziness.
Presbyvestibulopathy was diagnosed in only 2.9% of patients.
Vestibular-ocular reflex gain declines with age but remains normal in most elderly patients.
Abstract
Dizziness is common in older adults, and often presents a diagnostic challenge. Vestibular function declines with age, but the prevalence and diagnostic explanatory value of mild vestibular loss in isolation (i.e., the clinical diagnosis of “presbyvestibulopathy”) remains uncertain. We retrospectively analyzed consecutive patients aged ≥ 60 years in a subspecialty dizziness clinic who underwent clinical assessment (history, exam, videonystagmography) and horizontal canal video head impulse testing. We examined (i) the prevalence of vestibular loss (by laterality/degree of loss), including across age groups, and (ii) the distribution of primary diagnoses and proportion attributable to presbyvestibulopathy. Of the 102 included patients (72% female, mean age 72.8 years), 70 (68.6%) had normal vestibular function. Seven (6.9%) had mild bilateral vestibular hypofunction (vestibulo-ocular…
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Taxonomy
TopicsVestibular and auditory disorders · Hearing, Cochlea, Tinnitus, Genetics · Cerebral Venous Sinus Thrombosis
