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Case Reports
. 2006 Jun;15(6):886-90.
doi: 10.1007/s00586-005-0970-y. Epub 2006 Jan 24.

Cervical vertigo and dizziness after whiplash injury

Affiliations
Case Reports

Cervical vertigo and dizziness after whiplash injury

Kenji Endo et al. Eur Spine J. 2006 Jun.

Abstract

Whiplash injury is not only limited to neck injury but also brainstem injury that does not involve direct damage to the neck or head. The symptoms of whiplash injury are polymorphous, with the most common complaints being cervical pain, headache and scapulodynia. Vertigo and dizziness are also reported in 25-50% of the cases. In otoneurologic studies, magnetic resonance angiography (MRA) is used for the evaluation of vertebrobasilar hemodynamics in patients who complain of dizziness and vertigo. It is reported that vertebrobasilar artery insufficiency (VBI) leads to brainstem and cerebellar ischemia and infarction following cervical manipulation. Here we examined the correlation between vertigo or dizziness and the right and left side difference in vertebral arteries after whiplash injury using MRA. We studied 20 patients who complained of neck pain with vertigo or dizziness after whiplash injury and 13 healthy volunteers as a control. In the control group, abnormal MRA findings in the vertebral arteries such as occlusion, stenosis or slow blood flow were seen in 77% of the cases. In the patient group, abnormal MRA findings were seen in 60%. The side difference in blood flow was 3.5+/-2.5 cm/s in the control group and 6.1+/-3.0 cm/s in the patient group. Our findings suggest that some subjects with persistent vertigo or dizziness after whiplash injury are more likely to have VBI on MRA. VBI might be an important background factor to evoke cervical vertigo or dizziness after whiplash injury. The side difference between the two vertebral arteries could cause a circulation disorder in the vertebrobasilar system after whiplash injury. However, the VBI on MRA itself was also seen in the control group, and thus it is not clear whether it is due to whiplash injury in the patient group.

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Figures

Fig. 1
Fig. 1
Top: MRA of the case presented in the text with stenosis of the left vertebral artery (arrow). There is no stenotic region in the basilar artery. Bottom: upper deflections represent blood flow in arteries. From left side, left carotid artery, left vertebral artery, right vertebral artery (arrow), and right carotid artery. Lower deflections represent blood flow in veins. Flow is expressed as volume per second
Fig. 2
Fig. 2
Case presentation. Changes in vertebral artery blood flow through the systolic and diastolic phases. In this case, the left side blood velocity is slower than that of the right side through each phase. RT-VA right side vertebral artery, LT-VA left side vertebral artery

References

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