
Proof of Concept for an “eyePhone” App to Measure Video Head Impulses
Author(s) -
Parker T. Maxwell,
Farrell Nathan,
Otero-Millan Jorge,
Kheradmand Amir,
McClenney Ayodele,
Newman-Toker David E.
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
digital biomarkers
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2504-110X
DOI - 10.1159/000511287
Subject(s) - research reports research article
Objective: Differentiating benign from dangerous causes of dizziness or vertigo presents a major diagnostic challenge for many clinicians. Bedside presentations of peripheral vestibular disorders and posterior fossa strokes are often indistinguishable other than by a few subtle vestibular eye movements. The most challenging of these to interpret is the head impulse test (HIT) of vestibulo-ocular reflex (VOR) function. There have been major advances in portable video-oculography (VOG) quantification of the video HIT (vHIT), but these specialized devices are not routinely available in most clinical settings. As a first step towards smartphone-based diagnosis of strokes in patients presenting vestibular symptoms, we sought proof of concept that we could use a smartphone application (“app”) to accurately record the vHIT. Methods: This was a cross-sectional agreement study comparing a novel index test (smartphone-based vHIT app) to an accepted reference standard test (VOG-based vHIT) for measuring VOR function. We recorded passive (examiner-performed) vHIT sequentially with both methods in a convenience sample of patients visiting an otoneurology clinic. We quantitatively correlated VOR gains (ratio of eye to head movements during the HIT) from each side/ear and experts qualitatively assessed the physiologic traces by the two methods. Results: We recruited 11 patients; 1 patient’s vHIT could not be reliably quantified with either device. The novel and reference test VOR gain measurements for each ear ( n = 20) were highly correlated (Pearson’s r = 0.9, p = 0.1) and, qualitatively, clinically equivalent. Conclusions: This preliminary study provides proof of concept that an “eyePhone” app could be used to measure vHIT and eventually developed to diagnose vestibular strokes by smartphone.