Vestibular diseases often have no or only nonspecific biomarkers. It is therefore necessary to define these disorders using operational criteria based on patterns of symptoms, i.e., the presence of inclusion… Click to show full abstract
Vestibular diseases often have no or only nonspecific biomarkers. It is therefore necessary to define these disorders using operational criteria based on patterns of symptoms, i.e., the presence of inclusion and exclusion criteria, similar to the situation with headaches or psychiatric diseases. Ten years ago, the Bárány Society embarked upon development of the International Classification of Vestibular Disorders (ICVD). This entails producing the different definitions iteratively according to a structured procedure with an internal review process, resulting in an open-access publication on the diagnostic criteria in each case. It is a multidisciplinary effort, and depending on the topic, cooperation with other scientific societies is sought. The classification encompasses primary vestibular disorders and non-vestibular disorders that may manifest with prominent vestibular symptoms. The following paper describes the procedure and briefly presents definitions which have already been published as well as those presently in elaboration.
               
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