Chapter 17 Serologic Studies
I. Dizziness can be psychogenic or organic
- Organic dizziness can be nonvestibular or vestibular
- Vestibular dizziness can be central or peripheral (inner ear)
- Inner ear dizziness can be unilateral or bilateral
II. Serologic tests for inner ear dizziness
- Most helpful in dizzy patients with bilateral, progressive (i.e., recent) sensorineural hearing loss because the percentage of true positive results is higher in this patient population
- Rapid progression of hearing loss over days or weeks distinguishes these patients from those with age-related or noise induced sensorineural hearing loss
- A review of family history and medications helps rule out hereditary hearing loss and ototoxicity
- Decision to obtain serologic testing in dizzy patients is based on audiometry results
III. Inner Ear Disorders That Prompt Serologic Studies
- Autoimmune Inner Ear Disease
- Clinical hallmark is bilateral, rapidly progressive sensorineural hearing loss
- Dizziness occurs in ~ 50% of patients and consists of lightheadedness, vertigo, or ataxia.
- Immune laboratory tests are used to confirm a presumptive clinical diagnosis
- Testing should be done when symptoms are acute
- Hearing loss has progressed within the last 3 months
IV. Types of Immune Tests
- Antigen specific- use homologous or heterologous inner ear tissues and search for cellular or humoral (antibody) activity as direct evidence of immune reactivity
- Antigen-nonspecific- do not use inner ear tissues but instead search for soluble circulating immune complexes as indirect evidence of immune reactivity
- Laboratory techniques
- Antigen specific cellular immune testing
- Lymphocyte transformation test (LTT, blast proliferation)
- Antigen-specific humoral testing
- indirect immunoflurorescence,
- enzyme-linked immunoassay
- Western blot immunoassay
- Predictive Values
- Western blot better than LTT
- some patients have positive Western blots but negative LTTs
- Others have negative Western blots but positive LTTs
- May reflect different etiologies or the same disease entity or different entities
- Treatment of autoimmune inner ear disease consists of prednisone 1 mg/kg/day for 30 days followed by slow tapering and methotrexate or cyclophosphamide for maintenance or salvage therapy
V. Syphilis
- Progressive bilateral sensorineural hearing loss, with or without dizziness
- Meniere’s syndrome with episodic vertigo is also common
- Serologic tests are used for diagnosis because most patients with late-onset or acquired otologic syphilis will have a negative history for syphilis and normal physical exam
- Types of serologic tests for syphilis
- Nontreponemal- Veneral Disease Research Laboratory and rapid plasma regain
- Generally not ordered because of low specificity and low sensitivity in late syphilis (the most common form of otologic syphilis)
- Treponemal- fluorescent treponemal antibody absorption (FTA-abs) and microhemaggluination assay for Treponema pallidum (MHA-TP)- can be used for luetic inner ear disease
- Treatment for inner ear syphilis
- Benzathine penicillin G 2.4 million units intramuscularly weekly for 3 weeks, then 3 months or an oral agent daily for 3 months in the penicillin-allergic patient
- Other treatments- prednisone 60 mg daily for 30 days followed by a slow tapering and maintenance therapy as needed
VI. Lyme Disease
- Caused by infection with Borrelia burgdorferi
- Transmitted by several species of tick
- Initial manifestations consist of
- Arthralgia
- Neuropathy
- Meningitis
- Myocarditis
- Facial paralysis
- Sudden hearing loss and Meniere’s syndrome have been reported
- Sensorineural hearing loss and dizziness are not initial manifestations
- Diagnosis is based on history, tick bite (often unnoticed) and elevated serum or cerebrospinal fluid antibodies to the organism
- Treatment: Oral doxycycline or B-lactamose penicillin
- Parenteral antibiotics are required for severe cases
VII. Miscellaneous
- Serologic tests can be obtained for HIV (human immunodeficiency virus)
- Dizziness from HIV can vary depending on the stage of disease
- Hausler et al found that HIV-infected patients frequently had abnormal neurootologic findings.
- Advanced stages-
- central nervous system and inner ear deficits were noted
- including sensorineural hearing loss and vertigo