Changes in heart rate and respiration rate in patients with vestibular dysfunction following head movements which provoke dizziness
Changes in heart rate and respiration rate in patients with vestibular dysfunction following head movements which provoke dizziness
Patients with vestibular dysfunction often complain of additional symptoms typical of panic disorder and/or hyperventilation. This study investigated whether autonomic and respiratory symptoms reported by patients with vestibular disorders were associated with objective changes in heart and respiration rate following head movements provoking dizziness. Subjective ratings of symptoms and anxiety and objective measures of heart and respiration rate were obtained from 29 patients and 16 healthy controls immediately before and after the subjects performed three standardised sets of vigorous head movements. Within-group analyses revealed greater increases in respiration rate following head movement among patients who complained of more somatic symptoms, both during the previous 2 months and following head movement. Copyright (C) 1998 Elsevier Science B.V.
Anxiety, Autonomic, Dizziness, Respiration, Somatization, Vertigo, Vestibular
95-108
Yardley, L.
64be42c4-511d-484d-abaa-f8813452a22e
Gresty, M.
dcf0400e-bdc3-4fc5-8f4d-5ec007420635
Bronstein, A.
10f686b6-9e0a-46be-abbe-a09040e6739b
Beyts, J.
9339ee4c-4ed9-44c6-b820-4b9a21a64dfb
1 September 1998
Yardley, L.
64be42c4-511d-484d-abaa-f8813452a22e
Gresty, M.
dcf0400e-bdc3-4fc5-8f4d-5ec007420635
Bronstein, A.
10f686b6-9e0a-46be-abbe-a09040e6739b
Beyts, J.
9339ee4c-4ed9-44c6-b820-4b9a21a64dfb
Yardley, L., Gresty, M., Bronstein, A. and Beyts, J.
(1998)
Changes in heart rate and respiration rate in patients with vestibular dysfunction following head movements which provoke dizziness.
Biological Psychology, 49 (1-2), .
(doi:10.1016/S0301-0511(98)00029-5).
Abstract
Patients with vestibular dysfunction often complain of additional symptoms typical of panic disorder and/or hyperventilation. This study investigated whether autonomic and respiratory symptoms reported by patients with vestibular disorders were associated with objective changes in heart and respiration rate following head movements provoking dizziness. Subjective ratings of symptoms and anxiety and objective measures of heart and respiration rate were obtained from 29 patients and 16 healthy controls immediately before and after the subjects performed three standardised sets of vigorous head movements. Within-group analyses revealed greater increases in respiration rate following head movement among patients who complained of more somatic symptoms, both during the previous 2 months and following head movement. Copyright (C) 1998 Elsevier Science B.V.
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Published date: 1 September 1998
Keywords:
Anxiety, Autonomic, Dizziness, Respiration, Somatization, Vertigo, Vestibular
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 509315
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/509315
ISSN: 0301-0511
PURE UUID: 092a619b-10c5-4a1b-b7a8-e3df6533411e
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Date deposited: 18 Feb 2026 17:41
Last modified: 19 Feb 2026 02:35
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Author:
M. Gresty
Author:
A. Bronstein
Author:
J. Beyts
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