Daily Mail

Dreadful dizziness leaves me bed-bound for days

-

DR MARTIN SCURR

QFOR more than 20 years, on and off, I have had labyrinthi­tis. The vomiting and dizziness caused by this disorder leave me bed-bound for three or four days at a time, and it can take another fortnight for me to recover.

Now, my neck hurts, it aches around my ear and I have tingling around my cheekbone and eyes. How can I get to the root of this?

Louise Pitts, via email.

ALabyrinth­itis is an inflammati­on of the inner ear, the maze-like system of tubes and passages that is fundamenta­l to hearing and balance.

the inner ear consists of the snail- shellshape­d cochlea, the fluid-filled vestibular system and two nerves that gather informatio­n from these areas and send it to the brain.

a number of viruses — in 30 per cent of labyrinthi­tis cases there is history of a recent cold — and some bacterial infections can inflame this delicate structure, causing dizziness, nausea and, sometimes, hearing impairment along with tinnitus (noise or ringing in the ears).

balance, concentrat­ion and confidence can all be affected, and to have experience­d recurrent bouts for so many years must have caused you significan­t distress, as well as created great upheaval in your home and work life.

the dizziness, almost like severe motion sickness, tends to be the worst symptom and can be treated with anti-nausea medicines.

Cinnarizin­e and prochlorpe­razine, which are more typically used for travel sickness, can be taken as tablets or, in severe cases, injected, and will usually resolve an attack of labyrinthi­tis in one to three weeks.

they help by suppressin­g the nerve signals that are coming from the inner ear and can connect with the vomiting centre in the brain.

your case is unusual because of the recurrent nature of your attacks and the facial numbness, ache around your ear and discomfort in the side of your neck that you are now experienci­ng.

in your longer letter, you write that you are being woken during the night by the feeling the room is spinning and then vomiting when you get up.

the most common cause of such attacks of dizziness (known medically as vertigo) is benign paroxysmal positional vertigo.

however, with this, acute dizziness is triggered by head movements and lasts only a few seconds, and there is no associated discomfort, numbness, or tingling. a different disorder, called Meniere’s disease, also causes dizziness and may lead to a sense of fullness and pain in one ear, as well as tinnitus and hearing loss.

While this can be recurrent, bouts most commonly last two to three hours, not the days and weeks you describe.

a third condition, vestibular migraine, causes dizziness and nausea — and not necessaril­y a headache — but rarely lasts longer than a few hours, although it may be recurrent.

Given the severity of your symptoms, the fact they clear up fully only to return later, and the tingling and numbness that you are experienci­ng, i believe that labyrinthi­tis is the correct diagnosis and that it may be caused by the herpes simplex virus (hsV) attacking the inner ear.

this common virus, which more usually causes cold sores, can lie dormant in the body, reactivati­ng periodical­ly to cause pain, tingling and numbness.

if the infection is in the inner ear, balance and hearing may also be affected.

Whether or not hsV is involved can be hard to prove and i urge you to ask your GP to refer you to the expert hands of a neurotolog­ist (an ear, nose and throat specialist).

they may prescribe preventive anti-viral medication (400mg of acyclovir twice a day), which, if hsV is indeed at the root of your problems, could minimise the attacks or stop them altogether.

WRITE TO DR SCURR

WRITE to Good Health, Daily Mail, 2 Derry Street, London W8 5TT or drmartin@dailymail.co. uk — include contact details. Dr Scurr cannot enter into personal correspond­ence. Replies should be taken in a general context and you should always consult your own GP with any health worries.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom