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Cupulolithiasis
601
Citations
0
References
1969
Year
Central Vestibular SystemVestibular SystemHead PositionNeurotologyCentral Nervous SystemTerm CupulolithiasisPeripheral Vestibular SystemSocial SciencesHealth Sciences
We have labeled abstract lines. Let's aggregate per label. Purpose: "THE TERM cupulolithiasis is presented for the first time to designate a vestibular disorder which previously has been identified by several names including postural vertigo, positional vertigo, and positional vertigo of the benign paroxysmal type." Background: Two lines: first: "Recent pathological studies support the concept that the disorder is caused by a deposit, presumably composed of mineral, on the cupula of the posterior semicircular canal which renders this organ sensitive to gravitational force and, therefore, subject to stimulation with changes in head position." second: "Bárány first described the disorder as he observed it in a 27-year-old woman and he wrote as follows: The attacks only appeared when she lay on her right side." Combine. Findings: "The clinical features of cupulolithiasis are distinctive and serve to differentiate it from positional vertigo caused by lesions of the central nervous system." Mechanism: "The diagnosis can be made by inducing the characteristic vestibular manifestations by provocative positional testing." Other: "When she did" – incomplete? The line is just "When she did".
THE TERM cupulolithiasis is presented for the first time to designate a vestibular disorder which previously has been identified by several names including postural vertigo, positional vertigo, and positional vertigo of the benign paroxysmal type. Recent pathological studies support the concept that the disorder is caused by a deposit, presumably composed of mineral, on the cupula of the posterior semicircular canal which renders this organ sensitive to gravitational force and, therefore, subject to stimulation with changes in head position. The clinical features of cupulolithiasis are distinctive and serve to differentiate it from positional vertigo caused by lesions of the central nervous system. The diagnosis can be made by inducing the characteristic vestibular manifestations by provocative positional testing. Bárány<sup>1</sup>first described the disorder as he observed it in a 27-year-old woman and he wrote as follows: The attacks only appeared when she lay on her right side. When she did