A new study highlights a largely preventable cause of dizziness in older adults—benign paroxysmal positional vertigo (BPPV)—and argues that falls clinics should routinely screen for it. Researchers focusing on seniors who present after falls or fall risk events report that BPPV can be both common and clinically actionable, meaning targeted treatment could reduce repeated episodes and improve safety.
BPPV arises when small calcium carbonate crystals in the inner ear become dislodged and move into semicircular canals, disrupting normal balance signaling. The resulting vertigo is typically brief, triggered by head position changes such as looking up, turning in bed, or bending forward. While benign, the condition can mimic more serious vestibular disorders and may be overlooked when clinicians focus primarily on injury evaluation.
The study examines why screening matters in a falls-clinic setting, where time pressure and multifactorial risk profiles are the norm. Older patients often have several overlapping contributors to falls, including medication effects, gait impairment, and neuropathy. In that environment, positional vertigo can be misattributed to “unsteadiness,” causing delays in diagnosis and treatment.
To identify BPPV, clinicians commonly use bedside maneuvers designed to provoke characteristic symptoms and eye movements. The findings can then guide canal-specific therapy, most notably canalith repositioning procedures that aim to return displaced crystals to their proper location. These interventions are non-invasive and can be effective when matched to the correct subtype of BPPV.
The authors emphasize that systematic screening is not just an academic exercise—it may change outcomes by converting a reversible vestibular problem into a treatable diagnosis. In practical terms, recognizing BPPV during a falls assessment could shorten the pathway from symptoms to intervention, potentially reducing recurrent dizziness-related unsteadiness.
Importantly, the paper frames BPPV detection as a bridge between emergency or geriatric assessment and rehabilitation planning. When dizziness triggers are documented, clinicians can tailor advice on movement strategies, vestibular precautions, and follow-up, rather than relying solely on generalized fall prevention counseling.
The research also draws attention to the broader concept of diagnostic yield in clinical pathways. If a screening test is simple, inexpensive, and highly actionable, it can be justified even when the patient already has many risk factors. For BPPV, the logic is strong: accurate recognition enables immediate therapeutic action.
By centering BPPV within falls-clinic workflows, the study proposes a shift toward more precise, mechanism-based prevention. For older adults, that means fewer missed opportunities to treat dizziness at its source—before it contributes to the next fall.
Subject of Research: Benign paroxysmal positional vertigo (BPPV) screening in older adults presenting to falls clinics
Article Title: The importance of screening for benign paroxysmal positional vertigo in older patients presenting to falls clinics
Article References: Maas, B.D.P.J., van Leeuwen, R.B., Spies, P.E. et al. The importance of screening for benign paroxysmal positional vertigo in older patients presenting to falls clinics. BMC Geriatrics (2026). https://doi.org/10.1186/s12877-026-07777-0
Image Credits: AI Generated
DOI: 10.1186/s12877-026-07777-0
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