Author:
Ballvé Moreno José Luis,Carrillo Muñoz Ricard,Rando Matos Yolanda,Villar Balboa Iván,Cunillera Puértolas Oriol,Almeda Ortega Jesús,Rodero Perez Estrella,Monteverde Curto Xavier,Rubio Ripollès Carles,Moreno Farres Noemí,Arias Agudelo Olga Lucia,Martin Cantera Carlos,Azagra Ledesma Rafael
Abstract
BackgroundEvidence on the effectiveness of the Epley manoeuvre in primary care is scarce.AimTo evaluate effectiveness at 1 week, 1 month, and 1 year of a single Epley manoeuvre versus a sham manoeuvre in primary care.Design and settingMulticentre, double-blind randomised controlled trial in two primary care practices in Spain from November 2012 to January 2015.MethodPatients were ≥18 years diagnosed with subjective or objective posterior benign paroxysmal positional vertigo (vertigo only, or vertigo and nystagmus after a Dix–Hallpike test [DHT]). The intervention group received the Epley manoeuvre, and the control group received a sham manoeuvre. Betahistine was prescribed following the same regimen in both groups. The main outcome measures were the DHT result classified as negative (neither vertigo nor nystagmus) or positive. Positive results were further divided into a positive result for both vertigo and nystagmus (positive DHT with nystagmus), and a positive result for vertigo only (positive DHT without nystagmus); self-reported resolution of vertigo; and self-reported severity of vertigo evaluated on a 10-point Likert scale (10 = worst imaginable vertigo).ResultsIn total, 134 patients were randomised to either the intervention group (n = 66) or the sham group (n = 68). The intervention group showed better results in the unadjusted analyses at 1 week, with a lower rate of positive DHT with nystagmus (P = 0.022). A positive baseline DHT with nystagmus was associated with a reduction in vertigo severity (marginal effect for 10-point Likert-like question −1.73, 95% confidence interval [CI] = −2.95 to −0.51) and better positive DHT rates in the intervention group (adjusted odds ratio 0.09, 95% CI = 0.01 to 0.92) in the multivariate analyses.ConclusionA single Epley manoeuvre performed in primary care is an effective treatment for reversing a positive DHT and reducing vertigo severity in patients with baseline nystagmus in the DHT.
Publisher
Royal College of General Practitioners
Cited by
19 articles.
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