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Easy Vertigo
Treatment Discovered (new study)
A
hard blow to the head often leads to vertigo, which is bad enough, but for some
sufferers, it gets even worse. Instead of clearing up on its own, for an
unlucky few it hangs around like an obnoxious guest at your house party.
There
is good news though. Scientists have just published a study in the journal Acta
Oto-Laryngologica that shows how easy this type of vertigo actually is to treat.
Benign paroxysmal positional vertigo (BPPV) is by far the
most common cause of the condition. It happens when tiny calcium crystals
accidentally fall into the semicircular canals in your inner ear where they
irritate the nerve hairs that send balance data to your brain.
The
typical treatment for this type of vertigo is head movements that guide these
crystals out of the canals.
But,
while most cases of BPPV appear out of the blue with no clear
cause (idiopathic BPPV) some cases are caused by blows to the
head or ear injuries caused by ear surgery (traumatic BPPV).
The
authors of the new study noticed that previous papers didn’t agree about which
type was easiest to treat, so they looked at all the scientific literature they
could find to settle the question once and for all.
They
found six high-quality studies with 865 traumatic BPPV patients and 3,027 idiopathic BPPV patients as subjects.
On
average, these studies found that patients with traumatic BPPV type needed three times as many
treatments as the idiopathic patients did, and they were also nearly three
times as likely to suffer a recurrence.
Despite
this, the studies showed that traumatic BPPV was just as treatable as idiopathic BPPV. It was just that success took longer.
One
large American study that they missed (because it was published too late) found
that both types were equally treatable, but it also found that the traumatic
type did not require more treatments and was not more likely to
recur. This means it partially contradicts the new review.
So,
it’s a bit of a confused picture, but the one conclusion that all studies
currently agree on is that both types of BPPV can be treated with the common head
movements that help the calcium crystals to fall back out of the semicircular
canals.
But there is even an easier, more effective treatment for all types of vertigo. All it requires are the easy home exercises found here…
Easy Vertigo
Treatment – A New Way to Diagnose Vertigo at Home
30
percent of people suffer from vertigo at some point in their
lives but getting it diagnosed can be a real hassle.
The
problem is that it’s such a specialized field, so when you arrive at the ER
they might not have a practitioner and the diagnostic instruments available to
help you.
But
they really should, because stroke is one of the potential causes of vertigo, and if stroke is the underlying problem then a
quick diagnosis can be crucial to minimizing its impact.
Well,
help may finally be at hand, because researchers from the University of Sydney
have just designed video goggles that can help with the diagnosis of vertigo. Details of their tests appear in a
new article in the journal Neurology.
They
recruited 113 people who had already had the cause of their vertigo diagnosed using traditional
in-clinic diagnostic procedures. They were then taught how to use the goggles
to record their eye movements during vertigo episodes.
The
scientists hoped to use the recordings to diagnose the cause of vertigo.
43
of the volunteers suffered from Meniere’s disease, an inner ear disorder that
causes dizziness, tinnitus, a feeling of fullness, pain, and
sometimes hearing loss.
The
goggles did help the researchers to diagnose this disease accurately, which is
great news because this normally requires things like scans that can only be
done in a clinical setting.
40
of the 43 subjects with Meniere’s disease showed specific eye movements that
helped them make the right diagnosis in up to 95 percent of cases, and people
without it could be correctly ruled out in 95 percent of cases.
67
of the subjects suffered from vestibular migraine, a condition that causes vertigo but doesn’t always include
headaches. Their eye movements varied more than the people with Meniere’s
disease, so it was harder to diagnose using the goggles. Still, some movements
were clearly related to vestibular migraine, so diagnosis was possible.
Seven
of the subjects suffered from benign paroxysmal positional vertigo
(BPPV), a condition where your head movements trigger your vertigo attacks.
Scientists
identified one eye movement that told them with 100 percent accuracy which
people had BPPV and with 77 percent accuracy which
ones did not.
This
is great news, because it could mean that even when neurologists and
otolaryngologists aren’t available in an emergency room, video footage from the
goggles could be sent to remote specialists so they can make a diagnosis.
Another
great thing about these goggles is they’re portable. Vertigo sufferers don’t often have attacks
in clinics. They’re more likely to have them when they’re just going about
their day, so having the goggles means they can record their attacks when they
do occur.
But why not just skip the diagnosis and cure your vertigo right away? Simpler said than done, right? Not really if you use the easy technique explained here…
Easy Vertigo
Treatment – Effective Home Remedies for Vertigo
The
most common cause of vertigo is a type called benign paroxysmal positional
vertigo (or BPPv).
That’s
quite an intimidating sounding name, but a new study in the journal
Therapeutics and Clinical Risk Management says that it’s actually quite easy to
treat.
The
authors found out how easy by looking back over the cases of 359 patients who
had sought treatment at the dizziness clinic of Fujian Provincial
Hospital in Fuzhou, China between 2011 and 2017.
You
may not be aware of this, but your inner ear has semi-circular canals in it.
Unfortunately, their shape means that calcium crystals can accidentally fall
into them, and when they touch the nerve hairs that line them the balance
information they send to your brain gets scrambled, causing the vertigo sensations.
It
usually comes on when you move your head, especially when you roll over in bed
during the night.
The
usual treatment for this condition is also head movements, but ones designed to
guide the crystals out of the semicircular canals.
The
Chinese scientists used two movements, one called the Epley maneuver and
another called the (wonderfully named!) barbecue roll to dislodge these
crystals.
It
sounds like one of those tricky plastic toys where you guide a tiny ball
through a maze by tilting it, but in this case with a human! Still, tricky or
not, both methods worked well.
There’s
a canal at the back of the inner ear where crystals most often get stuck.
Doctors call it the posterior semicircular canal. 95.8 percent of these cases
were completely cleared up a month after the treatment.
The
horizontal semicircular canal is the second most common crystal trap. One month
after treatment 100 percent of these cases were fixed.
It
was more difficult to treat cases where the crystals were trapped in more than
one canal. In fact, these cases were the hardest to treat of all.
The
head had to be moved in different directions to dislodge them from each canal,
but hard though this was, an impressive 75 percent of cases were resolved a
month after treatment.
So,
the good news is that the Epley maneuver and the barbecue roll are both really
great at clearing up the most common type of vertigo and the even better news
is that you can do them both at home.
Watch
this video about this easy vertigo treatment - Treating BPPV: The Epley Manuever - Boys Town National Research Hospital
Of
course, you won’t know which ear canals the crystals are trapped in, so you
can’t know which movements will work for you. This means that your success rate
might be lower than you’d get in a clinical setting, but that shouldn’t put you
off trying.
Here’s
how to do the barbecue roll if the crystals are trapped in a canal in your
right ear:
Lie
on your right side for 30 seconds.
Roll
onto your back and stay there for 30 seconds.
Roll
onto your left side and stay there for 30 seconds.
Drop
your chin slightly and roll over onto your stomach while propping yourself up
on your elbows. Stay in that position for 30 seconds.
Roll
back onto your right side and stay there for 30 seconds with your chin still
down.
Sit
up slowly and keep your chin down for 15 minutes.
It
literally is that simple, but if it doesn’t work for you, then try starting on
your left side and reversing the steps or try the Epley maneuver instead. A
quick search online will turn up the instructions for that one.
The
only downside to treatment is that these movements will trigger your vertigo
and make it difficult for you to move correctly, so it might help to have a
friend or a relative on hand to support you through the steps.
And if neither work for your vertigo, there is still another (even simpler and more effective) approach you can try, such as this one…
This post is from the
Vertigo and Dizziness Program, which was created by Christian Goodman. This is
natural vertigo treatment program created for people who are looking for the
most effective vertigo home remedies, that utilizes the power of exercises to permanently
eliminate vertigo symptoms.
This will help to
eliminate tension and improve your blood flow and balance. From this Vertigo
Relief Program, you will learn to strengthen your tongue, achieve whole-body
balance, relieve tension and enhance your overall well-being.