Hyperventilation and Vertigo
- 1 June 1980
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in The Laryngoscope
- Vol. 90 (6) , 1003-1010
- https://doi.org/10.1002/lary.1980.90.6.1003
Abstract
An electronystagmographic study was conducted on 19 normal subjects, in order to observe whether the subjective sensation of dizziness provoked by hyperventilation could be confirmed objectively by nystagmus. Each of them had two electronystagmograms, the first being a routine ENG and the second a repetition of the first, but with additional periods of 90 sec. of hyperventilation at certain precise pre-determined moments of the test. Hyperventilation was not shown to have significant effect on the slow phase of post caloric nystagmus; however, it increased significantly (p = 0.061) the number of positions in which nystagmus was elicited. Hyperventilation would have such an effect in producing a certain degree of cerebral hypoxia through cerebral vasoconstriction and the Bohr effect.Keywords
Funding Information
- CRMUS (3-054517-1-0001-896-455-0)
This publication has 5 references indexed in Scilit:
- DIZZINESS: A Logical Approach to Diagnosis and TreatmentPostgraduate Medicine, 1974
- Vertigo and its TreatmentDrugs, 1974
- An approach to the dizzy patientNeurology, 1972
- Cerebral Effects of Hyperventilation in ManArchives of Neurology, 1965