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  2. Dix–Hallpike test - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DixHallpike_test

    When performing the DixHallpike test, patients are lowered quickly to a supine position (lying horizontally with the face and torso facing up) with the neck extended 30 degrees below horizontal by the clinician performing the maneuver. [3] The DixHallpike and the side-lying testing position have yielded similar results. As such, the side ...

  3. Epley maneuver - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Epley_maneuver

    The patient begins in an upright sitting posture, with the legs fully extended and the head rotated 45 degrees toward the side in the same direction that gives a positive DixHallpike test. Then the patient is quickly lowered into a supine position (on the back), with the head held approximately in a 30-degree neck extension (Dix-Hallpike ...

  4. Benign paroxysmal positional vertigo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Benign_paroxysmal...

    The condition is diagnosed by the person's history, and by performing the DixHallpike test or the roll test, or both. [24] [25] The patient can also be asked to induce vertigo by performing a movement that the patient knows to induce vertigo. The eyes of the patient can then easily be observed for which kind (horizontal, vertical, or ...

  5. List of eponymous medical signs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_eponymous_medical...

    DixHallpike test: Margaret R. Dix, Charles Skinner Hallpike: otolaryngology: Benign paroxysmal positional vertigo: synd/3615 at Who Named It? Elicitation of extreme vertigo upon lateral movement of a patient's head when lying in a supine position Döhle bodies: Karl Gottfried Paul Döhle: pathology: various including trauma and neoplasm

  6. Righting reflex - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Righting_reflex

    Vestibular reflexes can also be examined using body tilt experiments. Patients with vestibular disorders may go through the Dix-Hallpike maneuver, in which the patient is seated with legs extended and rotates the head 45 degrees. The patient is then asked to lie down on the table and checked for nystagmus, or uncontrollable eye movements ...

  7. DizzyFIX - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DizzyFIX

    Radtke et al. have suggested that home treatment is both safe and effective when training is adequate but that the key cause of failure of the home treatment is an imperfect repositioning maneuver. [4] As a result of failed home treatments, the DizzyFIX was developed to assist patients in the performance of a correct particle repositioning ...

  8. Tilt table test - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tilt_table_test

    Before taking the test, the patient may be instructed to fast for a period before the test will take place and to stop taking any medications. On the day of the tilt table test, an intravenous line may be placed in case the patient needs to be given medications quickly; however, this may influence the results of the test and may only be indicated in particular circumstances.

  9. Margaret Dix - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Margaret_Dix

    Dix was born in 1902 and attended Sherborne School for Girls.She studied medicine at the Royal Free Hospital School of Medicine, earning her MBBS in 1937. She then began training as a surgeon, but in 1940 she was injured in an air-raid during the Blitz that left her with a facial disfigurement and pieces of glass in her eyes, forcing her to give up her surgical career.