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Vestibular Function Testing
Vestibular function testing provides objective, quantitative assessment of the vestibular end organs and their central connections when the bedside examination is insufficient for diagnosis, when quantification is needed for monitoring disease progression or treatment response, or when medicolegal documentation is required. The vestibular testing laboratory has evolved significantly over the past two decades, with video head impulse testing (vHIT) and vestibular evoked myogenic potentials (VEMPs) joining the traditional caloric test and rotary chair to create a comprehensive assessment battery that can evaluate each semicircular canal and each otolith organ independently. Understanding when to order each test, how to interpret results, and how findings correlate with specific clinical conditions is essential for neurologists managing vestibular disorders.
Bottom Line
Caloric testing: Gold standard for detecting unilateral vestibular hypofunction; tests only the horizontal canal at low frequencies; Jongkees formula with >25% asymmetry is abnormal
Video head impulse test (vHIT): Tests individual semicircular canals at high (physiologic) frequencies; quantifies VOR gain; detects covert saccades invisible at bedside; complementary to (not a replacement for) caloric testing
Cervical VEMP (cVEMP): Assesses saccule and inferior vestibular nerve function; absent in vestibular neuritis affecting the inferior division; enhanced amplitude and low threshold in superior canal dehiscence syndrome (SCDS)
Ocular VEMP (oVEMP): Assesses utricle and superior vestibular nerve function; absent in superior vestibular neuritis; enhanced in SCDS
Rotary chair: Gold standard for bilateral vestibulopathy; sinusoidal testing across multiple frequencies; useful for ototoxicity monitoring
Posturography: Evaluates sensory integration for balance (visual, vestibular, somatosensory); identifies functional/malingering patterns; does not localize lesions
No single test evaluates the entire vestibular system: A comprehensive assessment often requires combining caloric, vHIT, VEMPs, and audiometry to fully characterize the pattern and extent of vestibular damage
VNG (using infrared video goggles) has largely replaced ENG (using periorbital electrodes) as the standard vestibular test battery. VNG provides superior spatial resolution and real-time visualization of eye movements. The battery typically includes three components: oculomotor evaluation, positional testing, and caloric testing.
Oculomotor Evaluation
Subtest
What It Assesses
Normal Response
Abnormal Findings
Saccade testing
Accuracy, velocity, and latency of rapid eye movements
Spontaneous nystagmus — peripheral (suppressed by fixation) or central (not suppressed)
Positional Testing
Static positional testing: Head in various positions (supine, head right, head left, head hanging) for 30–60 seconds each; nystagmus recorded with and without fixation
Dix-Hallpike and supine roll: Performed within the VNG suite with goggles recording; provides permanent documentation of nystagmus direction, latency, duration, and fatigue
Interpretation: Direction-fixed positional nystagmus (same direction in all positions) is usually peripheral; direction-changing positional nystagmus is concerning for central pathology but can also occur with horizontal canal BPPV
Caloric Testing
The caloric test remains the gold standard for detecting unilateral peripheral vestibular hypofunction. It evaluates each horizontal semicircular canal independently by inducing endolymph convection currents through thermal stimulation.
Caloric Testing: Technique and Interpretation
Technique:
Patient supine with head elevated 30° (to place horizontal canal in vertical orientation, maximizing convection)
Water irrigation (gold standard): warm (44°C) and cool (30°C) water in each ear (4 irrigations total); air caloric as alternative if TM perforation
Each irrigation lasts ~30–60 seconds; nystagmus recorded for ~90–120 seconds post-irrigation
Measure peak slow-phase velocity (SPV) of the induced nystagmus
Expected response (COWS mnemonic): Cold → Opposite (nystagmus fast phase away from irrigated ear); Warm → Same (nystagmus fast phase toward irrigated ear)
DP >30% = significant; indicates asymmetric spontaneous vestibular drive (may reflect central compensation or acute vestibular imbalance)
Bilateral vestibular weakness: Total caloric response (sum of all 4 SPV values) <20°/sec indicates bilateral vestibulopathy
Limitations of Caloric Testing
Tests only the horizontal semicircular canal — does not evaluate posterior or superior canals, or the otolith organs
Tests only the very low frequency range (~0.003 Hz) — a patient can have normal calorics but abnormal high-frequency VOR (detected by vHIT)
Anatomic variations in the temporal bone and external auditory canal can affect heat transfer, producing false results
Cannot be performed with tympanic membrane perforation (use air caloric) or middle ear disease
Patient alertness affects results — the patient must perform alerting tasks (serial subtractions, conversation) to prevent habituation
Video Head Impulse Test (vHIT)
vHIT uses lightweight video goggles with a high-speed camera (typically 250 Hz) to precisely measure eye movements during rapid head impulses, providing quantitative assessment of the VOR for each individual semicircular canal.
Technique
Equipment: Lightweight goggles with infrared camera and gyroscope (measures head velocity); patient fixates on a wall target at ~1 m distance
Horizontal canals: Tested by horizontal head impulses (as in bedside HIT); head is turned in the plane of the horizontal canals
Vertical canals: LARP (left anterior / right posterior) and RALP (right anterior / left posterior) planes; the examiner turns the head diagonally in the plane of the canal pair being tested
Parameters measured: VOR gain (ratio of eye velocity to head velocity at a specific time point, typically at 60–80 ms) and corrective saccades (overt and covert)
Interpretation
Parameter
Normal
Abnormal
Clinical Significance
VOR gain (horizontal)
≥0.8 (ratio of eye/head velocity)
<0.7 definitively abnormal; 0.7–0.8 borderline
Reduced gain indicates hypofunction of the ipsilateral horizontal canal
VOR gain (vertical)
≥0.7 (LARP/RALP planes)
<0.6 abnormal
Reduced gain indicates hypofunction of the specific canal tested
Overt saccades
Absent
Corrective saccades occurring AFTER the head impulse
Visible at bedside; indicate VOR deficit on the tested side
Covert saccades
Absent
Corrective saccades occurring DURING the head impulse
NOT visible at bedside (too fast for the examiner to see); detected only by vHIT; partially compensate for VOR deficit
Gain asymmetry
<10%
>10–15%
Asymmetry suggests unilateral hypofunction even if absolute gains are borderline
vHIT vs. Caloric Testing: Complementary, Not Interchangeable
Different frequency ranges: Caloric tests very low-frequency VOR (~0.003 Hz); vHIT tests high-frequency VOR (5–7 Hz, the physiologic range)
Dissociation is possible: A patient may have an abnormal caloric (low-frequency deficit) but normal vHIT (high-frequency VOR preserved) — this pattern is common in Ménière disease and vestibular migraine
Reverse dissociation: Abnormal vHIT with normal caloric is less common but can occur in early gentamicin toxicity
Complete vestibular testing requires both: For comprehensive assessment, caloric testing and vHIT provide complementary information across the frequency spectrum
vHIT advantages: Tests all 6 canals (3 pairs); rapid (<10 min); well-tolerated; detects covert saccades; quantitative and reproducible
vHIT limitations: Requires experienced examiner; artifacts from goggle slippage can produce falsely low gains; less sensitive than caloric for mild hypofunction
Vestibular Evoked Myogenic Potentials (VEMPs)
VEMPs are short-latency electromyographic responses evoked by loud sound or vibration stimuli that assess otolith organ (saccule and utricle) function. There are two types: cervical VEMP (cVEMP) and ocular VEMP (oVEMP).
Cervical VEMP (cVEMP)
Parameter
Detail
What it assesses
Saccule function and the inferior vestibular nerve
Enhanced amplitude; decreased threshold (≤75 dB nHL)
Enhanced amplitude; decreased threshold
VEMPs are the most sensitive laboratory test for SCDS; low threshold is the hallmark finding
Vestibular neuritis (superior division)
Normal (saccule/inferior nerve spared)
Absent or reduced on affected side
Pattern confirms selective superior vestibular nerve involvement
Vestibular neuritis (inferior division)
Absent or reduced on affected side
Normal
Less common; isolated inferior vestibular nerve involvement
Ménière disease
Enhanced early in disease; absent in late stages
Variable; may be reduced
Reflects endolymphatic hydrops affecting saccule; progressive loss over time
Vestibular schwannoma
Absent or delayed on tumor side
Absent or reduced on tumor side
Schwannoma compresses vestibular nerve; VEMPs may be abnormal before hearing loss
Bilateral vestibulopathy
Bilaterally absent or reduced
Bilaterally absent or reduced
Supports diagnosis when caloric and vHIT are also bilaterally abnormal
VEMP Limitations and Pitfalls
Conductive hearing loss: Reduces air-conducted VEMP amplitudes; must use bone-conducted stimuli if middle ear disease is present
Age effect: VEMP amplitudes decline with age (particularly cVEMP after age 60); age-matched normative data are essential
SCM activation for cVEMP: Inadequate SCM contraction reduces cVEMP amplitude; EMG monitoring and normalization for muscle activation level are important
Asymmetry ratio is more reliable than absolute amplitude: Intersubject amplitude variability is high; asymmetry ratio >35–40% is generally considered abnormal
Rotary Chair Testing
Rotary chair testing evaluates the VOR across a range of frequencies by rotating the patient on a motorized chair in darkness, measuring the resulting eye movements.
Technique
Setup: Patient seated in a motorized rotational chair in a light-tight enclosure; eye movements recorded with VNG goggles or EOG electrodes
Sinusoidal harmonic acceleration (SHA): Chair oscillates sinusoidally at frequencies from 0.01 to 0.64 Hz (or higher); measures VOR gain, phase, and symmetry at each frequency
Step velocity testing: Rapid rotation to a constant velocity (e.g., 60°/s); measures the decay of per-rotational nystagmus (time constant) and post-rotational responses
Visual-vestibular interaction: VOR in light, VOR suppression (fixation on a chair-mounted target during rotation)
Interpretation
Parameter
Normal
Clinical Significance of Abnormality
VOR gain
Frequency-dependent; increases from ~0.3 at 0.01 Hz to ~0.6–0.8 at 0.64 Hz
Bilaterally reduced gain across all frequencies = bilateral vestibulopathy; the gold standard test for this diagnosis
Phase
Slight phase lead at low frequencies, approaches 0 at higher frequencies
Increased phase lead = peripheral vestibular dysfunction (velocity storage deficit)
Symmetry
Symmetric responses in both directions (<5–10% asymmetry)
Asymmetry reflects unilateral vestibular imbalance; correlates with directional preponderance
Failure to suppress VOR = central (cerebellar) pathology
When Rotary Chair Is Most Useful
Bilateral vestibulopathy: The single best test for confirming bilateral vestibular loss; caloric testing shows bilateral weakness but rotary chair quantifies residual function across frequencies
Ototoxicity monitoring: Serial rotary chair testing during gentamicin or cisplatin therapy can detect progressive bilateral VOR loss before symptoms develop
Compensation assessment: Phase and symmetry changes over time reflect central compensatory processes after unilateral loss
Pediatric vestibular testing: Better tolerated by children than caloric testing; requires no water irrigation
Limitation: Stimulates both labyrinths simultaneously during rotation — cannot identify unilateral hypofunction as effectively as caloric or vHIT (which test ears independently)
Computerized Dynamic Posturography (CDP)
CDP evaluates postural stability by measuring sway on a force platform under systematically varied sensory conditions. The most widely used protocol is the Sensory Organization Test (SOT).
Sensory Organization Test (SOT)
Condition
Surface
Visual Surround
Sensory Input Available
1
Fixed
Fixed
Vision + somatosensory + vestibular
2
Fixed
Eyes closed
Somatosensory + vestibular (vision removed)
3
Fixed
Sway-referenced (moves with patient)
Somatosensory + vestibular (vision inaccurate)
4
Sway-referenced (moves with patient)
Fixed
Vision + vestibular (somatosensory inaccurate)
5
Sway-referenced
Eyes closed
Vestibular ONLY
6
Sway-referenced
Sway-referenced
Vestibular ONLY (vision inaccurate, somatosensory inaccurate)
Interpretation Patterns
Vestibular pattern: Falls/excessive sway on conditions 5 and 6 (vestibular-only conditions); conditions 1–4 relatively preserved; consistent with bilateral vestibular hypofunction or uncompensated unilateral loss
Somatosensory pattern: Falls on conditions 3, 4, 5, 6 (all conditions with sway-referenced platform); suggests peripheral neuropathy or somatosensory deficit
Visual preference pattern: Poor performance whenever visual input is inaccurate (conditions 3 and 6); patient is overly reliant on vision; seen in visual vertigo and some PPPD patients
Aphysiologic pattern: Falls on simple conditions (1 and 2) but performs better on more difficult conditions (5, 6) — this paradoxical pattern suggests functional/non-organic dizziness or symptom exaggeration
Posturography: Strengths and Limitations
Strengths: Identifies the sensory strategy a patient uses for balance; quantifies fall risk; useful for rehabilitation planning; helps identify functional/non-organic dizziness; objectively tracks progress
Limitations: Does not localize the lesion (peripheral vs. central); does not identify the specific vestibular pathology; influenced by patient effort and anxiety; expensive equipment; not available at all centers
Medicolegal role: Aphysiologic patterns on CDP provide objective evidence of symptom exaggeration in disability and litigation cases
Audiometry in Vestibular Disorders
Audiometric testing is an essential component of the vestibular evaluation, as specific patterns of hearing loss point to particular diagnoses and localize pathology.
Condition
Audiometric Pattern
Key Features
Ménière disease
Low-frequency sensorineural hearing loss (SNHL)
Fluctuating early in disease; progressive; unilateral (becomes bilateral in 30–50% over decades); may have "peak" configuration (trough at 250–500 Hz, recovery at 1–2 kHz)
Vestibular schwannoma
Asymmetric high-frequency SNHL
Unilateral or asymmetric (>15 dB difference at 2+ frequencies); speech discrimination disproportionately poor relative to pure-tone loss; ABR shows prolonged I–III or I–V interpeak latencies
Superior canal dehiscence
Low-frequency conductive hearing loss (air-bone gap) with normal tympanometry
"Third window" effect: bone conduction thresholds may be supranormal (<0 dB); air-bone gap closes at higher frequencies; mimics otosclerosis but tympanometry and stapedial reflexes are normal
Vestibular neuritis
Normal hearing
Spares cochlear function; if hearing loss is present, consider labyrinthitis (viral) or AICA stroke
Vestibular migraine
Normal or mild bilateral high-frequency SNHL
No progressive low-frequency loss (differentiates from Ménière); mild changes may occur during attacks
Labyrinthitis
Unilateral SNHL (variable frequencies)
Hearing loss accompanies vestibular neuritis; viral or bacterial etiology; bacterial requires urgent treatment
Bilateral vestibulopathy
May be normal or show bilateral SNHL
If SNHL present, consider ototoxicity (aminoglycosides — high-frequency loss) as the common etiology for both
When to Order Audiometry
All patients presenting with vertigo or dizziness (baseline assessment)
Any patient with subjective hearing loss, aural fullness, or tinnitus
Asymmetric symptoms suggesting unilateral pathology (to screen for schwannoma)
Follow-up for Ménière disease (documenting progression of hearing loss)
Before and during ototoxic drug therapy (aminoglycosides, cisplatin)
After acute vestibular syndrome to differentiate vestibular neuritis (normal hearing) from labyrinthitis (hearing loss) or AICA stroke (hearing loss)
Auditory Brainstem Response (ABR)
Purpose: Evaluates neural conduction along the auditory pathway from the cochlear nerve through the brainstem; useful as a screening tool for retrocochlear pathology when MRI is unavailable or contraindicated
Key waves: Wave I (distal CN8), wave III (cochlear nucleus/SOC), wave V (lateral lemniscus/inferior colliculus); interpeak latencies (I–III, III–V, I–V) are the primary measures
Vestibular schwannoma: Prolonged I–III or I–V interpeak latency; absent wave V; interaural latency difference >0.2 ms for wave V is abnormal; sensitivity ~90% for tumors >1 cm, but lower for small intracanalicular tumors
Limitations: Cannot detect small intracanalicular schwannomas reliably; MRI with gadolinium is the gold standard imaging test and has largely replaced ABR for schwannoma screening in most centers
Intraoperative monitoring: ABR is used during CPA surgery to monitor auditory nerve function in real time and preserve hearing
Clinical Decision-Making: Which Tests to Order
Clinical Scenario
Recommended Tests
Rationale
Acute vestibular syndrome (suspected peripheral)
Audiometry; consider vHIT if bedside HIT uncertain
Audiometry to rule out labyrinthitis/AICA; vHIT quantifies VOR loss and detects covert saccades
Recurrent episodic vertigo (suspected Ménière)
Audiometry; VNG with caloric; consider ECoG, VEMPs
Low-frequency SNHL supports diagnosis; caloric may show UW; ECoG for hydrops; VEMPs for saccular function
Recurrent episodic vertigo (suspected VM)
Audiometry; MRI brain/IAC
Rule out Ménière (audiometry) and structural lesions (MRI); vestibular testing often normal interictally
Asymmetric hearing loss
Audiometry; MRI with IAC (gadolinium); ABR if MRI unavailable
Rule out vestibular schwannoma; >15 dB asymmetry at ≥2 frequencies warrants MRI
Rotary chair is gold standard; caloric confirms bilateral weakness; vHIT quantifies canal-specific loss; audiometry for ototoxicity-related hearing loss
Suspected SCDS
VEMPs (cVEMP + oVEMP); audiometry; high-resolution CT temporal bone
Enhanced VEMPs with low threshold; air-bone gap with normal tympanometry; CT confirms dehiscence
Chronic dizziness / PPPD
CDP/posturography; VNG with caloric; audiometry
CDP identifies sensory strategy and aphysiologic patterns; VNG/caloric to rule out uncompensated peripheral loss; audiometry for completeness
Medicolegal / disability assessment
Full battery: VNG, caloric, rotary chair, vHIT, VEMPs, CDP, audiometry
Comprehensive documentation; CDP helps identify exaggeration; multiple tests provide cross-validation
Emerging and Advanced Testing
Electrocochleography (ECoG)
Purpose: Detects endolymphatic hydrops in suspected Ménière disease
Measure: Summating potential to action potential ratio (SP/AP ratio); elevated ratio (>0.4–0.5) suggests endolymphatic hydrops
Technique: Transtympanic (needle on promontory — most sensitive) or extratympanic (tympanic membrane surface electrode)
Limitations: Sensitivity varies (60–80%); may be normal interictally; invasive transtympanic approach limits availability
MRI Hydrops Imaging
Technique: 3D-FLAIR MRI 4–24 hours after intratympanic or intravenous gadolinium injection
Principle: Gadolinium enters perilymph but not endolymph, allowing visualization of endolymphatic space expansion
Clinical utility: Directly visualizes hydrops; increasingly used in research and clinical practice; may differentiate Ménière from vestibular migraine
Subjective Visual Vertical (SVV)
Purpose: Assesses otolith (primarily utricle) function; the patient aligns a luminous bar to perceived vertical in darkness
Abnormal: Tilt >2–2.5° from true vertical; tilts toward the lesion side in acute peripheral vestibulopathy; may tilt away from lesion in central otolithic lesions (brainstem)
Time course: Maximally abnormal in the acute phase; normalizes over weeks as central compensation occurs; persistent deviation suggests ongoing vestibular imbalance or central pathology
Clinical role: Quick bedside or office test; complements VEMPs in assessing otolith function; available as a smartphone application for point-of-care use
Vestibular Test Patterns by Condition
Condition
Caloric
vHIT
cVEMP
oVEMP
Audiometry
Vestibular neuritis (superior div.)
UW ipsilateral
Horizontal + anterior canal reduced gain
Normal
Absent/reduced ipsilateral
Normal
Vestibular neuritis (inferior div.)
Normal (or mild UW)
Posterior canal reduced gain
Absent/reduced ipsilateral
Normal
Normal
Ménière disease
UW ipsilateral (may be normal early)
Normal (caloric-vHIT dissociation)
Enhanced early; absent late
Variable
Low-frequency SNHL
Vestibular schwannoma
UW ipsilateral
May be normal (slow deafferentation)
Absent/reduced
Absent/reduced
Asymmetric high-frequency SNHL
SCDS
Normal or enhanced ipsilateral
Normal
Enhanced, low threshold
Enhanced, low threshold
Low-frequency ABG, normal tympanometry
Bilateral vestibulopathy
Bilateral weakness
Bilaterally reduced gain (all 6 canals)
Bilaterally reduced/absent
Bilaterally reduced/absent
Normal or bilateral high-frequency SNHL
Vestibular migraine
Normal or mild UW
Normal interictally
Variable
Variable
Normal or mild bilateral SNHL
Practical Considerations
Optimizing Vestibular Test Interpretation
Clinical correlation is essential: No vestibular test result should be interpreted in isolation; always correlate with history, examination, and imaging findings
Timing matters: Test results change over time (compensation, disease progression); caloric weakness may partially recover months after vestibular neuritis; test at the appropriate clinical time point
Medication effects: Vestibular suppressants (meclizine, benzodiazepines) suppress caloric responses and may mask nystagmus; hold suppressants for ≥48 h before testing when safe to do so
Age-matched normative data: VOR gain, VEMP amplitudes, and caloric responses all decline with age; use age-appropriate reference ranges
Inter-test correlation: When caloric and vHIT results disagree (dissociation), the clinical context determines which is more relevant — caloric-vHIT dissociation is characteristic of Ménière and vestibular migraine
Cost-effectiveness: Not every patient needs a full vestibular test battery; tailor testing to the clinical question (see clinical decision-making table above)
Communication: Vestibular test reports can be complex; develop a working relationship with the audiologist/vestibular technologist to ensure high-quality testing and clear reporting
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