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[Diagnosis and rehabilitation of anterior canal benign paroxysmal positional vertigo].

A L GusevaO M DoroninaA I Kryukov
Published in: Vestnik otorinolaringologii (2022)
ABPPV is a rare type of otolithiasis (3.4% of all BPPVcases). aBPPV typically has no association with middle and inner ear pathology and head trauma. Clinical symptoms in aBPPV are equal to pBPPV and less severe than in hBPPV. In aBPPV cases dominates cupulolithiasis type of canal involvement, which leads to treatment resistance and complex rehabilitation process, which includes repeat visits, multiple repeat maneuvers by specialist, home-based treatment and use of multipositional mechanical chair. Residual dizziness with duration more than a week after successful reposition occurs more often in patients with aBPPV compared to hBPPV and pBPPV cases. In aBPPV cases atypical change of nystagmus could be observed which could be due to canal switch from anterior to posterior canals, primary location of otoliths in common crus of vertical canals or masking chronic otolithiasis of anterior short arm of posterior canal.
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