Iridodonesis as a cause of recurrent vertigo

A 56-year-old woman complained of recurrent attacks of vertigo. Attacks lasted no longer than a second and could be easily provoked by abrupt eye movements. Vertigo disappeared when the left eye was covered. Symptoms had begun after left-sided cataract surgery resulting in subluxation of the left le...

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Veröffentlicht in:Neurology 2015-10, Vol.85 (15), p.1353-1353
Hauptverfasser: Kunte, Hagen, Paul, Friedemann, Pache, Florence, Dörr, Jan, Bellmann-Strobl, Judith, Harms, Lutz, Kronenberg, Golo
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container_end_page 1353
container_issue 15
container_start_page 1353
container_title Neurology
container_volume 85
creator Kunte, Hagen
Paul, Friedemann
Pache, Florence
Dörr, Jan
Bellmann-Strobl, Judith
Harms, Lutz
Kronenberg, Golo
description A 56-year-old woman complained of recurrent attacks of vertigo. Attacks lasted no longer than a second and could be easily provoked by abrupt eye movements. Vertigo disappeared when the left eye was covered. Symptoms had begun after left-sided cataract surgery resulting in subluxation of the left lens. The characteristic feature of iridodonesis is the tremulousness of the iris with eye movement (video on the Neurology(R) Web site at Neurology.org). While in many cases iridodonesis is asymptomatic, we speculate that in our patient, the instability of the optical system results in a trembling image on the retina, which, in turn, causes irritation in downstream brain regions.
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subjects Brain - physiopathology
Dizziness
Eye Movements - physiology
Female
Humans
Middle Aged
Recurrence
Vertigo - diagnosis
title Iridodonesis as a cause of recurrent vertigo
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