Journal Club- Bow Hunter Syndrome Mistaken as BPPV: A Cautionary Patient Case Report (October 2022)
October 11, 2022 @ 9:00 pm - November 17, 2022 @ 6:12 am EDT
Join Co-Founder Dr. Helena Esmonde PT, DPT, NCS and Dr. Michael C. Schubert PT, PhD, FAPT as they discuss and take live questions about a Bow Hunter Syndrome patient case study.
Dr. Michael C. Shubert PT, PhD, FAPT is an Associate Professor in the Department of Otolaryngology- Head and Neck Surgery as well as the Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation at Johns Hopkins University. His expertise is in vestibular disorders and his research interests focus on vestibular neurophysiology with current research investigating novel methods for identifying pathology within the oculomotor system and differences in motor learning in the VOR using different types of error signals.
Register for the event to be entered into our monthly raffle to win a Vestibular Model and download the article we’ll be discussing below.
Case Report: Bow Hunter Syndrome—One Reason to Add Non-gravity Dependent Positional Nystagmus Testing to Your Clinical Neuro-Otologic Exam
Author
Michael C. Schubert, Nathaniel Carter and Sheng-fu Larry Lo
Citation
Schubert, M. C., Carter, N., & Lo, S.-fu L. (2021). Case report: Bow hunter syndrome—one reason to add non-gravity dependent positional nystagmus testing to your clinical neuro-otologic exam. Frontiers in Neurology, 12. https://doi.org/10.3389/fneur.2021.814998
Join Co-Founder Dr. Helena Esmonde PT, DPT, NCS and Dr. Michael C. Schubert PT, PhD, FAPT as they discuss and take live questions about a Bow Hunter Syndrome patient case study.
Dr. Michael C. Shubert PT, PhD, FAPT is an Associate Professor in the Department of Otolaryngology- Head and Neck Surgery as well as the Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation at Johns Hopkins University. His expertise is in vestibular disorders and his research interests focus on vestibular neurophysiology with current research investigating novel methods for identifying pathology within the oculomotor system and differences in motor learning in the VOR using different types of error signals.
Register for the event to be entered into our monthly raffle to win a Vestibular Model and download the article we’ll be discussing below.
Guest
Michael Schubert, PT, PhD, FAPTA
Title
Case Report: Bow Hunter Syndrome—One Reason to Add Non-gravity Dependent Positional Nystagmus Testing to Your Clinical Neuro-Otologic Exam
Author
Michael C. Schubert, Nathaniel Carter and Sheng-fu Larry Lo
Citation
Schubert, M. C., Carter, N., & Lo, S.-fu L. (2021). Case report: Bow hunter syndrome—one reason to add non-gravity dependent positional nystagmus testing to your clinical neuro-otologic exam. Frontiers in Neurology, 12. https://doi.org/10.3389/fneur.2021.814998
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