The American Academy of Otolaryngology -- Head and Neck Surgery Foundation will issue a comprehensive clinical guideline to help healthcare practitioners identify and treat patients with benign ...
When should Brighton residents consider vestibular rehab for dizziness or balance problems? That question is addressed in a ...
The most common cause of vertigo, benign paroxysmal positional vertigo, or BPPV, can be debilitating and often recur in ...
ALEXANDRIA, VA --The American Academy of Otolaryngology--Head and Neck Surgery Foundation published the Clinical Practice Guideline: Benign Paroxysmal Positional Vertigo (Update) today in ...
Many times, people use dizziness and vertigo interchangeably, but there is a difference. While they are both balance problems, dizziness is an overall feeling of being unbalanced. With vertigo, there ...
Vertigo is a symptom of dizziness that can be quickly resolved with physical therapy and new high-tech goggles that help ...
For the last 41 years Debbie Chickadel has felt like she is always on an airplane. She constantly hears a pop, pop, pop in her ears and feels like she's spinning. Blinking to rest her eyes has the ...
Many people suddenly feel as though their surroundings are spinning or that they are losing their balance. Often, this is ...
The Dix-Hallpike maneuver remains the gold standard for diagnosing posterior canal BPPV. A positive test requires that vertigo associated with torsional (rotatory) and up-beating (toward the forehead) ...
Vertigo—that feeling of the room spinning around you when you’re stationary—is a relatively common occurrence, but it can certainly feel alarming. About 40% of U.S. adults experience vertigo at some ...
The emotional, functional and physical effects of vertigo on patients with vestibular migraine were shown to be more significant compared with the experiences of patients with benign paroxysmal ...
You know that feeling after you’ve been on a boat, when your feet finally touch dry land again, but you still feeling like you’re riding the waves? That’s the sensation someone with vertigo ...