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EAR CONDITIONS WE TREAT

Balance Disorders

A balance disorder is a condition marked by the symptoms of feeling unsteady or dizzy. Even while standing, lying or sitting still, a person with a balance disorder will feel as if they are moving, spinning or floating. While walking, people may feel as if they are tipping over.

Primary symptoms include dizziness or a spinning sensation (vertigo), falling or feeling as if you are going to fall, light-headedness, faintness, a floating sensation, blurred vision, confusion or disorientation. Other symptoms include nausea and vomiting, diarrhea, changes in heart rate and blood pressure, fear and anxiety or panic attacks.


These disorders can be caused by anything that affects the inner ear or the brain such as medications, ear infections or head injuries. The risk of balance disorders increases as people get older. 


What Are the Most Common Balance Disorders? 


  • Benign Paroxysmal Positional Vertigo (BPPV) involves brief but intense periods of vertigo that are triggered by specific changes in head position. It occurs when tiny crystals in the otolith organs become dislodged and migrate to the semicircular canals. 

  • Meniere’s disease is a chronic condition that causes vertigo, tinnitus, fullness in the ear and fluctuating hearing loss that may eventually become permanent. Meniere’s is usually confined to one ear and though its cause is unknown it may be the result of abnormal fluid build up in the inner ear. 

  • Labyrinthitis or Vestibular Neuronitis is an inflammation of the inner ear usually caused by an infection. Its symptoms include vertigo, temporary hearing loss and tinnitus. 

  • Superior Semicircular Canal Dehiscence is a less common cause for dysequilibreum often associated with some hearing loss and tinnitus. It is caused by thinning of the bone over the semicircular canal so that pressure can directly affect the balance and hearing. 


How Are Balance Disorders Treated? 


In order to determine the appropriate treatment plan for you, your audiologist will need to evaluate and diagnose your symptoms. Once determined, your audiologist will target the underlying condition in order to reduce or eliminate the symptoms. Options include: 


  • Medications (antihistamines, sedatives, antibiotics or steroids).

  • Physical or occupational therapy. 

  • Surgery. 

  • Repositioning exercises. 

  • Vestibular retraining programs. 

  • Lifestyle modifications (such as dietary changes and elimination of alcohol and nicotine).

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