Motorist’s Vestibular Disorientation Syndrome (MVDS)—Proposed Diagnostic Criteria
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
- Patients presenting with one or more symptoms of dizziness while driving, including:
- Disorientation
- False perception of the vehicle turning to one side
- Sweating, Palpitations, cold extremities
- Stiffness of body
- Symptoms present exclusively while driving and aggravated during the following situations:
- Higher speed (>80 km/h)
- Bends and turns
- Multi-lanes
- Upward or downward slopes
- Looking down from bridges
- Overtaking
- Looking at other vehicles while driving
- Closed tunnels
- Symptoms leading to significant distress or functional impairment while driving
- Symptoms that were not better attributed to another disease or disorder
3. Results
4. Discussion
- Stopping or reducing the frequency of driving
- Avoiding long journeys
- Avoiding multi-lane highways
- Avoiding driving on bridges
- Reducing overtaking
- Reducing the speed well in advance of traffic signals
- Driving at low speeds (less than 80 km/h) on single-lane roads
- Taking frequent breaks on long journeys
- Keeping water/juice ready during the journey
- -
- Primary MVD, i.e., MVDS: symptoms are exclusively experienced while driving, and the patient has no other vestibular disorder to explain the symptoms.
- -
- Secondary MVD: the patient has an underlying vestibular disorder explaining the symptoms, and the symptoms are not exclusive to driving.
- ○
- Secondary to visual vertigo in vestibular migraine
- ○
- Secondary to visual vertigo in PPPD
- ○
- Secondary to other vestibular disorders
- The vehicle might turn to one side
- Disorientation
- Pre-syncopal symptoms (sweating, cold extremities, palpitations)
- Postural adjustments *
- Symptoms are present exclusively while driving and aggravate during the following situations:
- Higher speed (>80 km/h)
- Bends and turns
- Multi-lanes
- Upward or downward slope
- Looking down from bridges
- Overtaking
- Looking at other vehicles while driving
- Closed tunnels
- The disorder usually begins insidiously without any identifiable precipitating event.
- Symptoms cause significant distress or functional impairment while driving.
- Symptoms are not better attributed to another disease or disorder **.
5. Limitations
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Clinical Characteristics | n (%) | |
---|---|---|
History * | Migraine | 15 (62.5) |
Hypertension | 5 (20.8) | |
Diabetes | 3 (12.5) | |
Hyperlipidemia | 3 (12.5) | |
Hypothyroidism | 2 (8.3) | |
No co-morbidity | 9 (37.5) | |
Symptoms of MVDS * | Disorientation | 19 (79.2) |
Sense of losing control | 13 (54.2) | |
Palpitations | 10 (41.7) | |
Vehicle turning to right | 9 (37.5) | |
Vehicle turning to left | 8 (33.3) | |
Sweating | 6 (25) | |
Stiffness of body | 5 (20.8) | |
Neck pain | 3 (12.5) | |
Blackout | 2 (8.3) | |
Cold extremities | 1 (4.2) | |
Triggers * | Higher speed | 16 (66.7) |
Multi-lanes | 14 (58.3) | |
Bends and turns | 12 (50) | |
Looking at other vehicles while driving or at signals | 10 (41.7) | |
Overtaking | 7 (29.2) | |
Upward slope | 6 (25) | |
Looking down from bridges | 6 (25) | |
Downward slope | 5 (20.8) | |
Closed tunnels | 3 (12.5) | |
The side to which patients felt veering or turning of vehicle | Right side | 9 (37.5) |
Left side | 8 (33.3) | |
No feeling | 7 (29.2) | |
Time of the day when the symptoms were severe * | Anytime while driving | 15 (62.5) |
Better in the morning and more in the evening | 8(33.3) | |
Morning | 4 (16.7) | |
Other symptoms * | Headaches | 15 (62.5) |
Fear/dizziness in open and or crowded places, supermarkets, malls, airport | 5 (22.7) | |
Phonophobia | 5 (22.7) | |
Blurred vision | 4 (18.2) | |
Photophobia | 2 (9.1) | |
None | 4 (18.2) | |
Symptoms of motion sickness (Current or past) (n = 12) # | Nausea/Vomiting | 5 (41.7) |
Drowsiness | 4 (33.3) | |
Headache | 4 (33.3) | |
Fatigue | 3 (25) | |
Giddiness/Imbalance | 1 (8.3) | |
Irritability | 1 (8.3) | |
Yawning | 1 (8.3) |
Parameters | n (%) | |
---|---|---|
Horizontal Saccades | Normal | 17 (100) |
Vertical Saccades | Normal | 15 (88.2) |
Hypometric | 2 (11.8) | |
Horizontal Smooth Pursuit | Normal | 13 (76.5) |
Saccadic | 4 (23.5) | |
Vertical Smooth Pursuit | Normal | 1 (5.9) |
Saccadic | 16 (94.1) | |
Spontaneous nystagmus (SPN) in dark (without fixation) | No | 14 (82.4) |
Up beating nystagmus | 3 (17.6) | |
Head-Shaking nystagmus | Absent | 14 (82.4) |
Present | 3 (17.6) | |
Hyperventilation induced nystagmus | Absent | 14 (82.4) |
Present | 3 (17.6) |
Gaze without Fixation | Nystagmus (n) | No Nystagmus (n) |
---|---|---|
Centre (n = 15) | 3 | 12 |
Left (n = 15) | 2 | 13 |
Up (n = 16) | 2 | 14 |
Right (n = 16) | 2 | 14 |
Down (n = 15) | 2 | 13 |
Patient No. | Medications Used in Different Patients | Subjective Report of Improvement |
---|---|---|
1. | Amitriptyline, Bisoprolol 2.5, Magnesium (400 mg) | 40% better in Amitriptyline, near complete on the addition of Bisoprolol 2.5, Mg 400 mg |
2. | Amitriptyline | Didn’t drive for initial 2–3 months, Improved after treatment |
3. | Amitriptyline, Bisoprolol | 70% better |
4. | Carbamazepine (associated epilepsy) | 80% better |
5. | Amitriptyline | No improvement |
6. | Amitriptyline, Bisoprolol, Magnesium, Desvenlafaxine | No improvement with Amitriptyline, 30–40% with Bisoprolol and Mg, 80% with Desvenlafaxine |
7. | Topiramate | Follow-up not available |
8. | Amitriptyline | Follow-up not available |
9. | Eslicarbazepine, Gabapentin 300 (vascular loop on MRI) | No improvement, Side-effects with Eslicarbazepine 800 mg, 70–80% improvement after Gabapentin |
10. | Amitriptyline | 80% improvement |
11. | Pregabalin | 75% improvement |
12. | Carbamazepine, Pregabalin, Amitriptyline, Magnesium, Gabapentin 300 (vascular loop on MRI) | No improvement with Carbamazepine and Pregabalin, 50% on Amitriptyline and Mg, 80–90% on Gabapentin |
13. | No treatment | Felt better without any treatment |
14. | No treatment | Didn’t follow-up |
15. | Venlafaxine | 25–30% after Venlafaxine |
16. | Magnesium, Concor | NA |
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Share and Cite
Pawar, V.; Ashraf, H.; Dorsala, S.; Mary, P.; Hameed, N.; H, D.N.; Adatia, S.P.; Raj, L.; Ananthu, V.R.; Shouka, M. Motorist’s Vestibular Disorientation Syndrome (MVDS)—Proposed Diagnostic Criteria. J. Pers. Med. 2023, 13, 732. https://doi.org/10.3390/jpm13050732
Pawar V, Ashraf H, Dorsala S, Mary P, Hameed N, H DN, Adatia SP, Raj L, Ananthu VR, Shouka M. Motorist’s Vestibular Disorientation Syndrome (MVDS)—Proposed Diagnostic Criteria. Journal of Personalized Medicine. 2023; 13(5):732. https://doi.org/10.3390/jpm13050732
Chicago/Turabian StylePawar, Vishal, Hanaan Ashraf, Srinivas Dorsala, Preethy Mary, Nazrin Hameed, Divya Nair H, Sweta Prakash Adatia, Leya Raj, V. R. Ananthu, and M. Shouka. 2023. "Motorist’s Vestibular Disorientation Syndrome (MVDS)—Proposed Diagnostic Criteria" Journal of Personalized Medicine 13, no. 5: 732. https://doi.org/10.3390/jpm13050732
APA StylePawar, V., Ashraf, H., Dorsala, S., Mary, P., Hameed, N., H, D. N., Adatia, S. P., Raj, L., Ananthu, V. R., & Shouka, M. (2023). Motorist’s Vestibular Disorientation Syndrome (MVDS)—Proposed Diagnostic Criteria. Journal of Personalized Medicine, 13(5), 732. https://doi.org/10.3390/jpm13050732