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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

  1. IntroductionWhat vHIT is and where it fits
  2. Anatomy and physiologyLabyrinth, canals, hair cells, VOR arc
  3. TechniqueGoggles, calibration, head impulses, pitfalls
  4. Normal tracesExpected gain by canal, age, and head velocity
  5. Saccades and VOR gainOvert, covert, anti-compensatory, and how to grade
  6. HIMP vs SHIMPTwo paradigms, complementary information
  7. Vestibular neuritisAcute superior and inferior vestibular nerve loss
  8. Meniere diseaseCaloric–vHIT dissociation as a diagnostic marker
  9. Vestibular schwannomaSlowly progressive unilateral vestibular loss
  10. BPPVPositional vertigo with a normal vHIT
  11. Vestibular migraineEpisodic vestibulopathy with usually normal vHIT
  12. Bilateral vestibulopathyOscillopsia and bilateral high-frequency loss
  13. Central vHIT patternsPICA, AICA, SCA strokes and the central mimics
  14. OtotoxicityAminoglycosides, platinum agents, monitoring strategies
  15. Post-surgical vHITRecovery after labyrinthectomy and schwannoma resection
  16. Paediatric vHITDevelopmental gain values and modified protocols
  17. Age-related vestibular lossPresbyvestibulopathy and ageing of the VOR
  18. HINTS and acute vestibular syndromeThe bedside discriminator between neuritis and stroke
  19. Interpretation and reportingPutting the trace, saccades, and context together

Cases, glossary, references

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.