

Please call 911 immediately if you are having chest pain, difficulty breathing, severe bleeding, sudden weakness or numbness, or if you think you have a medical emergency.
Vertigo Treatment
Self-Care at Home
Home therapy should only be undertaken if you have already been diagnosed with vertigo and are under the supervision of a doctor.
Medical Treatment
The choice of treatment will depend on the diagnosis.
- Vertigo can be treated with medicine taken by mouth, through medicine
placed on the skin (a patch), or drugs given through an IV.
- Specific types of vertigo may require additional treatment and
referral:
- Bacterial infection of the middle ear requires antibiotics.
- For Meniere's disease, in addition to symptomatic treatment, people might
be placed on a low salt diet and may require medication used to increase urine
output.
- A hole in the inner ear causing recurrent infection may require referral to an ear, nose, and throat (ENT) specialist for surgery.
- Bacterial infection of the middle ear requires antibiotics.
- In addition to the drugs used for benign paroxysmal positional vertigo,
several physical maneuvers can be used to treat the condition.
- Vestibular rehabilitation exercises consist of having the patient sit on
the edge of a table and lie down to one side until the vertigo resolves
followed by sitting up and lying down on the other side, again until the
vertigo ceases. This is repeated until the vertigo no longer occurs.
- Particle repositioning maneuver is a treatment based on the idea that the condition is caused by displacement of small stones in the balance center (vestibular system) of the inner ear. The head is repositioned to move the stones to their normal position. This maneuver is repeated until the abnormal eye movements are no longer visible.
- Vestibular rehabilitation exercises consist of having the patient sit on
the edge of a table and lie down to one side until the vertigo resolves
followed by sitting up and lying down on the other side, again until the
vertigo ceases. This is repeated until the vertigo no longer occurs.
more information from eMedicineHealth
WebMD Medical Reference from eMedicineHealth
Reviewed on
May 30, 2008
© 2008 WebMD, LLC. All rights reserved.
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