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- $Unique_ID{BRK00332}
- $Pretitle{}
- $Title{Evaluating Benign Positional Vertigo}
- $Subject{dizzy dizziness aging age elder elderly older geriatric Sense senses
- Benign Positional Vertigo head injury eye movements Hallpike Maneuver
- nystagmus rapid involuntary movement eyeballs circular pattern movements eyes}
- $Volume{F-1}
- $Log{
- Causes and Symptoms of Vertigo*0007501.scf}
-
- Copyright (c) 1991-92,1993 Tribune Media Services, Inc.
-
-
- Evaluating Benign Positional Vertigo
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-
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-
- QUESTION: I have a problem that has been with me for some time now. I get a
- feeling that the whole world is spinning, usually when I am getting out of bed
- in the morning. That's the worst time, although I can also feel this way when
- I get out of a chair or a car that I have been riding in for some time. I
- have no other symptoms with this, but am afraid of what the doctor may tell
- me. Could I have your opinion first, please? I am a young woman of 71 years.
-
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-
- ANSWER: Your description of your condition is very helpful, but without the
- physical examination that your own physician will be able to conduct, my
- opinion is really nothing more than an educated guess, but for what it is
- worth here it is. You are describing a true vertigo, a sensation that
- everything is moving about you, rather than that you had an episode of
- dizziness (which would lead me to another conclusion). They have occurred
- repeatedly, over a period of time, yet nothing else has happened, no other
- complaints or additional symptoms, so it doesn't sound like a condition that
- is getting worse or progressing. I believe you suffer from Benign Positional
- Vertigo. It is common in young women of your age, or in people who have
- suffered a head injury. It will only occur when you change a position, and
- shouldn't last for more than a minute or two if you remain still. What is
- lacking for my evaluation is to observe your eye movements while all of this
- is going on. Your own physician may be able to provoke the sensation using a
- technique called the Hallpike Maneuver (he is the doctor who discussed these
- conditions over 35 years ago). By rapidly moving you backward while you are
- sitting on the examination table, so that your head extends past the end of
- the table and hangs downward at a 45 degree angle, and then turning your head
- to the left, your symptoms may be provoked, and the movement of your eyes
- observed. If nystagmus occurs (a rapid involuntary movement of the eyeballs,
- in this case in a circular pattern) it is most probable that my diagnosis is
- correct, and that you have nothing to fear. A series of exercises may be all
- you need to reduce your problem considerably, and without the anxiety it has
- caused, you will probably feel much better indeed.
-
- ----------------
-
- The material contained here is "FOR INFORMATION ONLY" and should not replace
- the counsel and advice of your personal physician. Promptly consulting your
- doctor is the best path to a quick and successful resolution of any medical
- problem.
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