Brief Answer:
it was probably a minor stroke. MRI Brain required
Detailed Answer:
Hi there,
Thanks for your query.
Firstly, in order to PINPOINT the exact cause of your problems; give you a SOUND professional advice; and, TRUE VALUE FOR YOUR MONEY, may I request you to kindly provide additional information as follows :-
# Have you been having headaches with nausea or vomiting,
double vision prior to onset of vertigo 4 weeks back?
# Are you a patient of
high blood pressure, diabetes, heart disease or obesity??
# Did you vomit when you felt the room spinning, 4 weeks back?
# Please share with me, any other problems, if any, in as much details as possible.
Nevertheless, pending receipt of the additional information, vertigo and
unsteady gait occur due to problem of either, internal ear, cerebellum (posterior part of the brain) or the brainstem (described below).
As the onset of problems were abrupt, and still persisting, it was probably a minor stroke of either the cerebellum or the upper part of spinal cord (called brainstem) which connects to the brain.
The possible causes of stroke are :-
1. A
thromboembolism causing obstruction to blood flow in the artery supplying the cerebellum or the brainstem.
2. High blood pressure, causing a minor bleed.
3.
High cholesterol levels promote deposition of cholesterol in the lumen of blood vessels (called plaques, which jut inside the arteries and consequent narrowing with obstruction to blood flow). Sometimes, a piece of the plaque- in the main arteries supplying the brain- dislodges, gets carried by the blood stream to arteries of the brain, cutting off the blood supply.
4. Diabetes is a potential risk for strokes.
5. Rarely, a tumor of the nerve which supplies the internal ear (tumor is called Accoustic neuroma), which produces both : vertigo and unsteady gait.
I PERSONALLY AM OF THE OPINION THAT YOUR TREATING DOCTOR SHOULD HAVE ADVISED MRI OF BRAIN or Angio-MRI in the first instance to see for evidence of infarct/bleeding in the brain.
Consult your doctor and apprise him of my opinion. I am certain that he will agree with my opinion; order required tests, and- based on the reports- will arrive at a certain diagnosis and prescribe suitable treatment as advised.
It would however, be a pleasure to receive the additional information as requested, in addition to the test reports, which you must have received by now.
Hope I have addressed to your concerns to your complete satisfaction and you find my response helpful and informative. I will be happy to answer further queries, if any.
Fond regards and have a nice day,
Dr. XXXXXXX Karanwal
Replied by Dr. XXXXXXX Karanwal , 21 hours ago
Disclaimer: The Expert's advice is provided for general informational purposes only and SHOULD NOT be relied upon as a substitute for sound professional
medical advice, as a complete assessment of an individual has not taken place. Please consult your nearest physician before acting on it. The advice is not valid for medico-legal purposes also.
Have you been having headaches with nausea or vomiting, double vision prior to onset of vertigo 4 weeks back?
# Are you a patient of high blood pressure, diabetes, heart disease or obesity?? No, low blood pressure, no obesity and no diabetes
# Did you vomit when you felt the room spinning, 4 weeks back?
i did not vomit
# Please share with me, any other problems, if any, in as much details as possible.
i woke up one morning with severe spinning, i sat up and threw me back and room spun for a few seconds…
Asked by Me , 21 hours ago
Have you been having headaches with nausea or vomiting, double vision prior to onset of vertigo 4 weeks back?
i had a headache the day before nothing major.. no double vision ever.
Asked by Me , 21 hours ago
Doctor's reply to your question above...
Brief Answer:
Causes : minor stroke or internal ear problem
Detailed Answer:
Hi ma'am,
Thanks for the prompt input.
After analyzing the complete information, the possible causes narrow down to either a minor stroke, problem of the internal ear; or, lesion of the nerve which connects the internal ear with the brain.
Hence, I expect your treating doctor to order MRI Brain at the earliest. Please do share with me, the reports of the tests carried out recently.
Till then,
Have a nice day
Dr. XXXXXXX Karanwal
Replied by Dr. XXXXXXX Karanwal , 20 hours ago
Disclaimer: The Expert's advice is provided for general informational purposes only and SHOULD NOT be relied upon as a substitute for sound professional medical advice, as a complete assessment of an individual has not taken place. Please consult your nearest physician before acting on it. The advice is not valid for medico-legal purposes also.
I asked him and he said that it is not a stroke…
neurologist said it was not a stroke… now i am so scared… he said i would have had numbness on one side, and other symptoms..
Asked by Me , 20 hours ago
Doctor's reply to your question above...
Brief Answer:
Stroke due to vertebro-
basilar artery involvement
Detailed Answer:
Well ma'am,
I am personally of the opinion that it was stroke due to disruption of blood supply in a branch of the vertebro-basillar artery. A vertebra-basilar and a carotid angiogram will give us the exact idea.
Kindly discuss my entire opinion with your doctor during your next visit.
Regards,
Dr. XXXXXXX Karanwal
Replied by Dr. XXXXXXX Karanwal , 20 hours ago
Disclaimer: The Expert's advice is provided for general informational purposes only and SHOULD NOT be relied upon as a substitute for sound professional medical advice, as a complete assessment of an individual has not taken place. Please consult your nearest physician before acting on it. The advice is not valid for medico-legal purposes also.
i feel off balance is that the same as feeling unsteady… the symptoms are much better now that 2 weeks ago… he said with labrnthis it takes awhile to go away… if its that. also i have had only one episode of spinning which was that violent one 4 weeks ago. s if i am sitting i feel my head swaying…but its not constant… its with head movement
Asked by Me , 20 hours ago
Doctor's reply to your question above...
Brief Answer:
Test reports will give the exact cause of problem
Detailed Answer:
Yes. Off balance and feeling unsteady are same and called ataxia.
Further, as mentioned earlier, the possible lesion is either
* in the internal ear,
* the nerve connecting internal ear to the brain; and,
* cerebellum.
Involvement of internal ear is called
Labyrinthitis, while that of the nerve is called
Vestibular Neuronitis.
A SINGLE episode (without recurrence) of spinning sensation (vertigo) without nausea or vomiting, is unusual in Labyrinthitis. However, occurrence of unsteady feeling with head movement- as just brought out by you- does go in favor of Labyrinthitis or Vestibular neuronitis.
Lastly, your neurologist and
ENT Specialist are the best judge as they must have reached to a certain conclusion after carrying out thorough medical examination.
It would therefore be advisable to wait for the test reports, which will localize the exact cause.
Till then,Yes. Off balance and feeling unsteady are same and called ataxia.
Further, as mentioned earlier, the possible lesion either in the internal ear, the nerve connecting internal ear to the brain; and, cerebellum.
Involvement of internal ear is called Labyrinthitis, while that of the nerve is called Vestibular Neuronitis.
A SINGLE episode (without recurrence) of spinning sensation (vertigo) without nausea or vomiting, reduces the possibility of Labyrinthitis
Take care
Dr. XXXXXXX Karanwal
Replied by Dr. XXXXXXX Karanwal , 19 hours ago
Disclaimer: The Expert's advice is provided for general informational purposes only and SHOULD NOT be relied upon as a substitute for sound professional medical advice, as a complete assessment of an individual has not taken place. Please consult your nearest physician before acting on it. The advice is not valid for medico-legal purposes also.
One more question, will the vng and eng results tell us what it is? My mom had the same thing and she got the off balance feeling...for weeks. I hope this was not a stroke... I have 2 little kids.. They say the epley stops the vertigo
Asked by Me , 19 hours ago
All my test were normal... Other than He said my left ear had 54% versus my right ear at 50% and that is what is making me off balance. Electromamgraohy test? Put me on diomex
Asked by Me , 19 hours ago
R u going to reply?
Asked by Me , 3 hours ago
Doctor's reply to your question above...
Brief Answer:
VNG and ENG test reports are inconclusive.
Detailed Answer:
Hi there,
Firstly, I am really sorry for the delay WHICH WAS DUE TO ERRATIC INTERNET CONNECTIVITY.
I have gone through the reports, which- I am afraid- could not interpret. I will therefore request you to kindly quote the "interpretation" of the test.
Further, the entire sequence of events indicate a "mixed " type of vertigo. Incidentally, there are two types of vertigo :
* "Peripheral" (due to involvement of internal ear and the nerve). It is associated with nausea + vomiting (BUT YOU DID NOT HAVE EITHER OF THESE SYMPTOMS). It recovers within a few days to few weeks).
* " Central" (due to involvement of posterior brain(CEREBELLUM) and/or brainstem. Vomiting, nausea is uncommon (AS IN YOUR CASE). The unsteadiness or off-balance feeling persists for months. Your feeling of unsteadiness is still persisting, though 4 weeks have elapsed.
Hence, I STILL FEEL THAT YOUR PROBLEMS ARE DUE TO BRAINSTEM / CEREBELLUM. Further, a minor/minimal stroke (affecting either the brainstem or cerebellum) is still a possibility.
Proceeding further, the inner ear’s vestibular organs (internal ear) and the associated nerves and brain centers form a complex system that serves many functions and can be affected by a number of outside systems.
VNG and ENG tests diagnose the involvement of internal ear or nerve. In your case are inconclusive/equivocal.
HENCE, I WILL STILL RECOMMEND MRI of brain, focusing particularly on cerebellum and brainstem, TO diagnose/rule out lesions of these regions of the brain.
Regarding
Epley Maneuver, it is curative only in a particular type of "Peripheral" problem, called Benign Paroxysmal Positional Vertigo (BPPV). This condition is characterized by breaking off of minute particles (in the internal ear) and floating/drifting into other parts of the internal ear. Epley maneuver relocates the particles in their original site. IN YOUR CASE, THE PROBLEMS ARE NOT DUE TO BPPV. HENCE, IT WILL NOT BE EFFECTIVE IN YOUR CASE.
Lastly, I hope you meant "electromanography" which is carried out to diagnose glaucoma. Prescription of Diamox suggests that your ENT doctor has also found evidence of co-existing Glaucoma.
Lastly, I cannot comment on the cause of similar symptoms in your mother. Similar tests, as in your case, along with MRI Brain will conclusively pinpoint the cause.
I will therefore suggest that you take Betahistine tablets till such time you are perfectly normal. Your doctor will titrate its dose.
Hope I have addressed to your concerns to your complete satisfaction and you find my response helpful and informative. I will be happy to answer further queries, if any.
Fond regards and have a nice day,
Dr. XXXXXXX Karanwal