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Meniere's Disease
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Meniere's Disease
, Meniere Disease, Labyrinthine Hydrops, Endolymphatic Hydrops
See Also
Vertigo
Vertigo Causes
Sensorineural Hearing Loss
Peripheral Causes of Vertigo
Central Causes of Vertigo
Vertigo Management
Motion Sickness
Vestibular Neuronitis
Benign Paroxysmal Positional Vertigo
Perilymphatic Fistula
(
Hennebert's Sign
)
Acute Labyrinthitis
Bacterial Labyrinthitis
(
Acute Suppurative Labyrinthitis
)
HiNTs Exam
(
Three-Step Bedside Oculomotor Examination
)
Horizontal Head Impulse Test
(
Head Thrust Test
,
h-HIT
)
Nystagmus
Skew Deviation
(
Vertical Ocular Misalignment
,
Vertical Heterotropia
,
Vertical Strabismus
)
Dix-Hallpike Maneuver
Dizziness
Dysequilibrium
Syncope
Light Headedness
Epidemiology
Incidence
: 4.3 per 100,000 persons/year
Prevalence
: 17-46 per 100,000 persons
Age of onset
Most common at ages 20 to 60 years old
Peaks at 40-60 years old (with a biphasic peak around age 20 years old)
Etiology
Unknown
Exacerbated by stress or emotional disturbance
Associated with concurrent infection in 50% cases
Pathophysiology
Swelling of endolymphatic labyrinthine spaces (increased endolymphatic fluid pressure)
Degeneration of the
Organ of Corti
Symptoms
Prodrome
Headache
Triad
Vertigo
Recurrent, spontaneous episodes that may last minutes to hours, days when severe (may require bed rest)
Diagnosis requires at least 2 episodes lasting 20 minutes
Associated
Nausea
,
Vomiting
and
Ataxia
Sensorineural Hearing Loss
Fluctuant, typically low pitched
Hearing Loss
Tinnitus
"Roaring", low tone
Tinnitus
(or aural fullness)
Distribution
Typically unilateral, at least initially (but 33% have bilateral disease)
Other symptoms
Episodic fluctuating, ear pressure or aural fullness (inner ear endolymphatic fluid collection)
Signs
Nystagmus
(and associated
Ataxia
)
Nystagmus
is only present when
Vertigo
present
Unidirectional, horizontal or rotary, torsional
Nystagmus
Sensorineural Hearing Loss
Early: Low tones affected (low to medium frequency
Sensorineural Hearing Loss
)
Later: All tones affected
Hyperacusis
Some noises may seem paradoxically louder (auditory recruitment)
Diagnostics
Audiogram
Management
Acute
Benzodiazepine
s (e.g.
Diazepam
)
Antiemetic
s (e.g.
Ondansetron
,
Prochlorperazine
,
Promethazine
)
Transdermal
Scopolamine
Management
Maintenance
As of 2023, evidence is poor for all of the interventions listed
Diuretic
s
Hydrochlorothiazide
or
Hydrochlorothiazide
/
Triamterene
(Dyazide)
Lifestyle changes
Low salt diet (<2 grams daily)
Decrease
Caffeine
Smoking Cessation
Limit
Alcohol
Vestibular rehabilitation or
Exercise
s may be effective
Symptomatic Medications for acute episodes
See
Vertigo Management
for acute symptomatic management
Vestibular balance and rehabilitation therapy
Management
ENT
Transtympanic injection of
Corticosteroid
s
Ablation of vestibular hair cells (in those who already have
Hearing Loss
)
Performed with transtympanic injection of
Gentamicin
Surgery: (10% of patients with refractory cases)
Labyrinthectomy to decompress endolymphatic sacs (Symptom relief in 66%)
Vestibular Nerve
section (Symptom relief in 95%)
No procedure corrects the
Hearing Loss
References
Glasscock (1984) Am J Otol 5:536-42 [PubMed]
Knox (1997) Am Fam Physician 55(4):1185-90 [PubMed]
Muncie (2017) Am Fam Physician 95(3): 154-62 [PubMed]
Rogers (2023) Am Fam Physician 107(5): 514-23 [PubMed]
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