Guidelines for reasonable and appropriate care in the emergency department 3 (GRACE‐3): Acute dizziness and vertigo in the emergency department

Author:

Edlow Jonathan A.12ORCID,Carpenter Christopher34ORCID,Akhter Murtaza56ORCID,Khoujah Danya78ORCID,Marcolini Evie910ORCID,Meurer William J.11ORCID,Morrill David12,Naples James G.113ORCID,Ohle Robert141516ORCID,Omron Rodney1718ORCID,Sharif Sameer19ORCID,Siket Matt2021ORCID,Upadhye Suneel2223ORCID,e Silva Lucas Oliveira J.2425ORCID,Sundberg Etta26,Tartt Karen2728,Vanni Simone2930ORCID,Newman‐Toker David E.31ORCID,Bellolio Fernanda3233ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Emergency Medicine Harvard Medical School Boston Massachusetts USA

2. Department of Emergency Medicine Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center Boston Massachusetts USA

3. Department of Emergency Medicine Washington University School of Medicine St. Louis Missouri USA

4. Department of Emergency Medicine Washington University St. Louis Missouri USA

5. Department of Emergency Medicine Penn State School of Medicine State College Pennsylvania USA

6. Hershey Medical Center State College Pennsylvania USA

7. Department of Emergency Medicine University of Maryland School of Medicine Baltimore Maryland USA

8. Department of Emergency Medicine Adventhealth Tampa Tampa Florida USA

9. Department of Emergency Medicine Geisel School of Medicine, Dartmouth Hanover New Hampshire USA

10. Department of Emergency Medicine Dartmouth‐Hitchcock Medical Center Lebanon New Hampshire USA

11. Department of Emergency Medicine University of Michigan Medical School Ann Arbor Michigan USA

12. Patient Representative Lakeland Florida USA

13. Division of Otolaryngology‐Head & Neck Surgery Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center Boston Massachusetts USA

14. Department of Emergency Medicine Northern Ontario School of Medicine Sudbury Ontario Canada

15. Health Science North Research Institute Sudbury Ontario Canada

16. Department of Emergency Medicine Health Sciences North Sudbury Ontario Canada

17. Department of Emergency Medicine Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine Baltimore Maryland USA

18. Department of Emergency Medicine Johns Hopkins Hospital Baltimore Maryland USA

19. Division of Critical Care and Emergency Medicine, Department of Medicine McMaster University Hamilton Ontario Canada

20. Department of Emergency Medicine Robert Larner College of Medicine at the University of Vermont Burlington Vermont USA

21. Department of Emergency Medicine, Larner College of Medicine University of Vermont Burlington Vermont USA

22. Emergency Medicine, Evidence and Impact (HEI) McMaster University Burlington Ontario Canada

23. Health Research Methods, Evidence and Impact (HEI) McMaster University Burlington Ontario Canada

24. Mayo Clinic Rochester Minnesota USA

25. Department of Emergency Medicine Hospital de Clinicas de Porto Alegre Porto Alegre Rio Grande do Sul Brazil

26. COO Royal Oasis Pool and Spas Las Vegas Nevada USA

27. Absinthe Brasserie & Bar San Francisco California USA

28. St. George Spirits San Francisco California USA

29. Department of Emergency Medicine University of Florence Firenze Italy

30. Department of Emergency Medicine University Hospital Careggi Firenze Italy

31. Department of Neurology Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine Baltimore Maryland USA

32. Mayo Clinic College of Medicine Rochester Minnesota USA

33. Department of Emergency Medicine Mayo Clinic Rochester Minnesota USA

Abstract

AbstractThis third Guideline for Reasonable and Appropriate Care in the Emergency Department (GRACE‐3) from the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine is on the topic adult patients with acute dizziness and vertigo in the emergency department (ED). A multidisciplinary guideline panel applied the Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development, and Evaluation (GRADE) approach to assess the certainty of evidence and strength of recommendations regarding five questions for adult ED patients with acute dizziness of less than 2 weeks' duration. The intended population is adults presenting to the ED with acute dizziness or vertigo. The panel derived 15 evidence‐based recommendations based on the timing and triggers of the dizziness but recognizes that alternative diagnostic approaches exist, such as the STANDING protocol and nystagmus examination in combination with gait unsteadiness or the presence of vascular risk factors. As an overarching recommendation, (1) emergency clinicians should receive training in bedside physical examination techniques for patients with the acute vestibular syndrome (AVS; HINTS) and the diagnostic and therapeutic maneuvers for benign paroxysmal positional vertigo (BPPV; Dix–Hallpike test and Epley maneuver). To help distinguish central from peripheral causes in patients with the AVS, we recommend: (2) use HINTS (for clinicians trained in its use) in patients with nystagmus, (3) use finger rub to further aid in excluding stroke in patients with nystagmus, (4) use severity of gait unsteadiness in patients without nystagmus, (5) donotuse brain computed tomography (CT), (6) donotuse routine magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) as a first‐line test if a clinician trained in HINTS is available, and (7) use MRI as a confirmatory test in patients with central or equivocal HINTS examinations. In patients with the spontaneous episodic vestibular syndrome: (8) search for symptoms or signs of cerebral ischemia, (9) donotuse CT, and (10) use CT angiography or MRI angiography if there is concern for transient ischemic attack. In patients with the triggered (positional) episodic vestibular syndrome, (11) use the Dix–Hallpike test to diagnose posterior canal BPPV (pc‐BPPV), (12) donotuse CT, and (13) donotuse MRI routinely, unless atypical clinical features are present. In patients diagnosed with vestibular neuritis, (14) consider short‐term steroids as a treatment option. In patients diagnosed with pc‐BPPV, (15) treat with the Epley maneuver. It is clear that as of 2023, when applied in routine practice by emergency clinicians without special training, HINTS testing is inaccurate, partly due to use in the wrong patients and partly due to issues with its interpretation. Most emergency physicians have not received training in use of HINTS. As such, it is not standard of care, either in the legal sense of that term (“what the average physician would do in similar circumstances”) or in the common parlance sense (“the standard action typically used by physicians in routine practice”).

Funder

Society for Academic Emergency Medicine

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Emergency Medicine,General Medicine

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