Journal of Clinical Medicine (Apr 2022)

Suppression Head Impulse Test (SHIMP) versus Head Impulse Test (HIMP) When Diagnosing Bilateral Vestibulopathy

  • Tessa van Dooren,
  • Dmitrii Starkov,
  • Florence Lucieer,
  • Bieke Dobbels,
  • Miranda Janssen,
  • Nils Guinand,
  • Angelica Pérez Fornos,
  • Herman Kingma,
  • Vincent Van Rompaey,
  • Raymond van de Berg

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm11092444
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 9
p. 2444

Abstract

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The Suppression Head Impulse (SHIMP) test was introduced as an alternative to the Head Impulse Paradigm (HIMP) to overcome challenges in VOR gain calculation due to the interference of covert saccades. The objectives of this study were (1) to determine if SHIMP, compared to HIMP, reduces covert saccades in BV patients and (2) to define the agreement on diagnosing BV between SHIMP and HIMP. First, the number of covert saccades was compared between SHIMP and HIMP. Secondly, VOR gain was compared between SHIMP and HIMP. Lastly, the agreement between SHIMP and HIMP on identifying BV (horizontal VOR gain p < 0.001). However, the clinical relevance of these statistically significant differences is small. In 93% of the patients, an agreement was found between the two paradigms regarding the diagnosis of BV, and both paradigms detect BV in the vast majority of patients.

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