PLoS ONE (Jan 2017)

Vertigo and dizziness in adolescents: Risk factors and their population attributable risk.

  • Filipp M Filippopulos,
  • Lucia Albers,
  • Andreas Straube,
  • Lucia Gerstl,
  • Bernhard Blum,
  • Thyra Langhagen,
  • Klaus Jahn,
  • Florian Heinen,
  • Rüdiger von Kries,
  • Mirjam N Landgraf

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0187819
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 11
p. e0187819

Abstract

Read online

To assess potential risk factors for vertigo and dizziness in adolescents and to evaluate their variability by different vertigo types. The role of possible risk factors for vertigo and dizziness in adolescents and their population relevance needs to be addressed in order to design preventive strategies.The study population consisted of 1482 school-children between the age of 12 and 19 years, who were instructed to fill out a questionnaire on different vertigo types and related potential risk factors. The questionnaire specifically asked for any vertigo, spinning vertigo, swaying vertigo, orthostatic dizziness, and unspecified dizziness. Further a wide range of potential risk factors were addressed including gender, stress, muscular pain in the neck and shoulder region, sleep duration, migraine, coffee and alcohol consumption, physical activity and smoking.Gender, stress, muscular pain in the neck and shoulder region, sleep duration and migraine were identified as independent risk factors following mutual adjustment: The relative risk was 1.17 [1.10-1.25] for female sex, 1.07 [1.02-1.13] for stress, 1.24 [1.17-1.32] for muscular pain, and 1.09 [1.03-1.14] for migraine. The population attributable risk explained by these risk factors was 26%, with muscular pain, stress, and migraine accounting for 11%, 4%, and 3% respectively.Several established risk factors in adults were also identified in adolescents. Risk factors amenable to prevention accounted for 17% of the total population risk. Therefore, interventions targeting these risk factors may be warranted.