Print everything
The atlas is structured so each chapter prints as a standalone document. Use this page to navigate the chapters in order, then use your browser's print menu (⌘P / Ctrl+P) on each chapter you want to keep. Page styles hide sidebar and controls automatically.
Tip: When printing a chapter, all three tier-levels (Foundation, Trainee, Clinician) are revealed in print regardless of which tier is currently selected on screen. You always get the complete content in print.
Table of contents
- Introduction— What vHIT is and where it fits
- Anatomy and physiology— Labyrinth, canals, hair cells, VOR arc
- Technique— Goggles, calibration, head impulses, pitfalls
- Normal traces— Expected gain by canal, age, and head velocity
- Saccades and VOR gain— Overt, covert, anti-compensatory, and how to grade
- HIMP vs SHIMP— Two paradigms, complementary information
- Vestibular neuritis— Acute superior and inferior vestibular nerve loss
- Meniere disease— Caloric–vHIT dissociation as a diagnostic marker
- Vestibular schwannoma— Slowly progressive unilateral vestibular loss
- BPPV— Positional vertigo with a normal vHIT
- Vestibular migraine— Episodic vestibulopathy with usually normal vHIT
- Bilateral vestibulopathy— Oscillopsia and bilateral high-frequency loss
- Central vHIT patterns— PICA, AICA, SCA strokes and the central mimics
- Ototoxicity— Aminoglycosides, platinum agents, monitoring strategies
- Post-surgical vHIT— Recovery after labyrinthectomy and schwannoma resection
- Paediatric vHIT— Developmental gain values and modified protocols
- Age-related vestibular loss— Presbyvestibulopathy and ageing of the VOR
- HINTS and acute vestibular syndrome— The bedside discriminator between neuritis and stroke
- Interpretation and reporting— Putting the trace, saccades, and context together
Cases, glossary, references
- Clinical cases — 8 scenarios with rationale and teaching points
- Glossary — 39 terms
- References — 27 cited sources
For maintainers
A true single-file concatenated export — every chapter, every tier, every figure in one HTML document — is intentionally not part of this build. Embedding the interactive simulators multiple times in one document creates duplicate-id collisions and unstable client state; readers who need a printable handout use the per-chapter print stylesheet, which renders all three tier levels and hides controls. The static export in out/ contains every chapter as its own printable HTML.