Yu Hsiang Hsieh
Johns Hopkins University
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Stroke | 2009
Jorge C. Kattah; Arun Talkad; David Wang; Yu Hsiang Hsieh; David E. Newman-Toker
Background and Purpose— Acute vestibular syndrome (AVS) is often due to vestibular neuritis but can result from vertebrobasilar strokes. Misdiagnosis of posterior fossa infarcts in emergency care settings is frequent. Bedside oculomotor findings may reliably identify stroke in AVS, but prospective studies have been lacking. Methods— The authors conducted a prospective, cross-sectional study at an academic hospital. Consecutive patients with AVS (vertigo, nystagmus, nausea/vomiting, head-motion intolerance, unsteady gait) with ≥1 stroke risk factor underwent structured examination, including horizontal head impulse test of vestibulo-ocular reflex function, observation of nystagmus in different gaze positions, and prism cross-cover test of ocular alignment. All underwent neuroimaging and admission (generally <72 hours after symptom onset). Strokes were diagnosed by MRI or CT. Peripheral lesions were diagnosed by normal MRI and clinical follow-up. Results— One hundred one high-risk patients with AVS included 25 peripheral and 76 central lesions (69 ischemic strokes, 4 hemorrhages, 3 other). The presence of normal horizontal head impulse test, direction-changing nystagmus in eccentric gaze, or skew deviation (vertical ocular misalignment) was 100% sensitive and 96% specific for stroke. Skew was present in 17% and associated with brainstem lesions (4% peripheral, 4% pure cerebellar, 30% brainstem involvement; &khgr;2, P=0.003). Skew correctly predicted lateral pontine stroke in 2 of 3 cases in which an abnormal horizontal head impulse test erroneously suggested peripheral localization. Initial MRI diffusion-weighted imaging was falsely negative in 12% (all <48 hours after symptom onset). Conclusions— Skew predicts brainstem involvement in AVS and can identify stroke when an abnormal horizontal head impulse test falsely suggests a peripheral lesion. A 3-step bedside oculomotor examination (HINTS: Head-Impulse—Nystagmus—Test-of-Skew) appears more sensitive for stroke than early MRI in AVS.
Mayo Clinic Proceedings | 2008
David E. Newman-Toker; Yu Hsiang Hsieh; Carlos A. Camargo; Andrea J. Pelletier; Gregary T. Butchy; Jonathan A. Edlow
OBJECTIVE To describe the spectrum of visits to US emergency departments (EDs) for acute dizziness and determine whether ED patients with dizziness are diagnosed as having a range of benign and dangerous medical disorders, rather than predominantly vestibular ones. PATIENTS AND METHODS A cross-sectional study of ED visits from the National Hospital Ambulatory Medical Care Survey (NHAMCS) used a weighted sample of US ED visits (1993-2005) to measure patient and hospital demographics, ED diagnoses, and resource use in cases vs controls without dizziness. Dizziness in patients 16 years or older was defined as an NHAMCS reason-for-visit code of dizziness/vertigo (1225.0) or a final International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision, Clinical Modification diagnosis of dizziness/vertigo (780.4) or of a vestibular disorder (386.x). RESULTS A total of 9472 dizziness cases (3.3% of visits) were sampled over 13 years (weighted 33.6 million). Top diagnostic groups were otologic/vestibular (32.9%), cardiovascular (21.1%), respiratory (11.5%), neurologic (11.2%, including 4% cerebrovascular), metabolic (11.0%), injury/poisoning (10.6%), psychiatric (7.2%), digestive (7.0%), genitourinary (5.1%), and infectious (2.9%). Nearly half of the cases (49.2%) were given a medical diagnosis, and 22.1% were given only a symptom diagnosis. Predefined dangerous disorders were diagnosed in 15%, especially among those older than 50 years (20.9% vs 9.3%; P<.001). Dizziness cases were evaluated longer (mean 4.0 vs 3.4 hours), imaged disproportionately (18.0% vs 6.9% undergoing computed tomography or magnetic resonance imaging), and admitted more often (18.8% vs 14.8%) (all P<.001). CONCLUSION Dizziness is not attributed to a vestibular disorder in most ED cases and often is associated with cardiovascular or other medical causes, including dangerous ones. Resource use is substantial, yet many patients remain undiagnosed.
Canadian Medical Association Journal | 2011
Alexander A. Tarnutzer; Aaron L. Berkowitz; Karen A. Robinson; Yu Hsiang Hsieh; David E. Newman-Toker
Dizziness is the third most common major medical symptom reported in general medical clinics[1][1] and accounts for about 3%–5% of visits across care settings.[2][2] In the United States, this translates to 10 million ambulatory visits per year because of dizziness,[3][3] with roughly 25% of these
Stroke | 2013
David E. Newman-Toker; Ali S. Saber Tehrani; Georgios Mantokoudis; John H. Pula; Cynthia I. Guede; Kevin A. Kerber; Ari M. Blitz; Sarah H. Ying; Yu Hsiang Hsieh; Richard E. Rothman; Daniel F. Hanley; David S. Zee; Jorge C. Kattah
Background and Purpose— Strokes can be distinguished from benign peripheral causes of acute vestibular syndrome using bedside oculomotor tests (head impulse test, nystagmus, test-of-skew). Using head impulse test, nystagmus, test-of-skew is more sensitive and less costly than early magnetic resonance imaging for stroke diagnosis in acute vestibular syndrome but requires expertise not routinely available in emergency departments. We sought to begin standardizing the head impulse test, nystagmus, test-of-skew diagnostic approach for eventual emergency department use through the novel application of a portable video-oculography device measuring vestibular physiology in real time. This approach is conceptually similar to ECG to diagnose acute cardiac ischemia. Methods— Proof-of-concept study (August 2011 to June 2012). We recruited adult emergency department patients with acute vestibular syndrome defined as new, persistent vertigo/dizziness, nystagmus, and (1) nausea/vomiting, (2) head motion intolerance, or (3) new gait unsteadiness. We recorded eye movements, including quantitative horizontal head impulse testing of vestibulo-ocular-reflex function. Two masked vestibular experts rated vestibular findings, which were compared with final radiographic gold-standard diagnoses. Masked neuroimaging raters determined stroke or no stroke using magnetic resonance imaging of the brain with diffusion-weighted imaging obtained 48 hours to 7 days after symptom onset. Results— We enrolled 12 consecutive patients who underwent confirmatory magnetic resonance imaging. Mean age was 61 years (range 30–73), and 10 were men. Expert-rated video-oculography–based head impulse test, nystagmus, test-of-skew examination was 100% accurate (6 strokes, 6 peripheral vestibular). Conclusions— Device-based physiological diagnosis of vertebrobasilar stroke in acute vestibular syndrome should soon be possible. If confirmed in a larger sample, this bedside eye ECG approach could eventually help fulfill a critical need for timely, accurate, efficient diagnosis in emergency department patients with vertigo or dizziness who are at high risk for stroke.
Academic Emergency Medicine | 2013
Ali S. Saber Tehrani; Diarmuid Coughlan; Yu Hsiang Hsieh; Georgios Mantokoudis; Fredrick K. Korley; Kevin A. Kerber; Kevin D. Frick; David E. Newman-Toker
OBJECTIVES Dizziness and vertigo account for roughly 4% of chief symptoms in the emergency department (ED). Little is known about the aggregate costs of ED evaluations for these patients. The authors sought to estimate the annual national costs associated with ED visits for dizziness. METHODS This cost study of adult U.S. ED visits presenting with dizziness or vertigo combined public-use ED visit data (1995 to 2009) from the National Hospital Ambulatory Medical Care Survey (NHAMCS) and cost data (2003 to 2008) from the Medical Expenditure Panel Survey (MEPS). We calculated total visits, test utilization, and ED diagnoses from NHAMCS. Diagnosis groups were defined using the Healthcare Cost and Utilization Projects Clinical Classifications Software (HCUP-CCS). Total visits and the proportion undergoing neuroimaging for future years were extrapolated using an autoregressive forecasting model. The average ED visit cost-per-diagnosis-group from MEPS were calculated, adjusting to 2011 dollars using the Hospital Personal Health Care Expenditures price index. An overall weighted mean across the diagnostic groups was used to estimate total national costs. Year 2011 data are reported in 2011 dollars. RESULTS The estimated number of 2011 US ED visits for dizziness or vertigo was 3.9 million (95% confidence interval [CI] = 3.6 to 4.2 million). The proportion undergoing diagnostic imaging by computed tomography (CT), magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), or both in 2011 was estimated to be 39.9% (39.4% CT, 2.3% MRI). The mean per-ED-dizziness-visit cost was
Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 2008
Samuel Yang; Andrew Hardick; Yu Hsiang Hsieh; Celeste Quianzon; Marcos Kuroki; Justin Hardick; Aleksandar Kecojevic; Avanthi Abeygunawardena; Jonathan M. Zenilman; Johan H. Melendez; Vishai Doshi; Charlotte A. Gaydos; Richard E. Rothman
1,004 in 2011 dollars. The total extrapolated 2011 national costs were
Academic Emergency Medicine | 2009
David E. Newman-Toker; Carlos A. Camargo; Yu Hsiang Hsieh; Andrea J. Pelletier; Jonathan A. Edlow
3.9 billion. HCUP-CCS key diagnostic groups for those presenting with dizziness and vertigo included the following (fraction of dizziness visits, cost-per-ED-visit, attributable annual national costs): otologic/vestibular (25.7%;
Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 2009
Samuel Yang; Richard E. Rothman; Yu Hsiang Hsieh; Andrew Hardick; Helen Won; Aleksandar Kecojevic; Joany Jackman; Charlotte A. Gaydos
768;
Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 2006
Justin Hardick; Julie Giles; Andrew Hardick; Yu Hsiang Hsieh; Thomas C. Quinn; Charlotte A. Gaydos
757 million), cardiovascular (16.5%,
Annals of Emergency Medicine | 2011
Richard E. Rothman; Yu Hsiang Hsieh; Leah Harvey; Samantha Connell; Christopher J. Lindsell; Jason S. Haukoos; Douglas A.E. White; Aleksandar Kecojevic; Michael S. Lyons
1,489;