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What Is The Cause And Treatment For Vestibular Neuronitis?
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All of this is consistent with neuronitis
Detailed Answer:
the syndrome of vestibular neuronitis is a monophasic disease process that is usually severe for 1 week with rotational vertigo, nausea, vomiting, and difficulty walking. by the end of the week it the symptoms are usually less severe but persistent or intermittent in your case. it mainly depends on how fast your brain can become accustomed to the new situation. after the acute phase the symptoms generally last for another 2-3 months before completely resolving and then there can be exacerbations which are less severe but still disabling. the medicines don't work that well except to make you sleepy but the anti nausea ones usually help the most. headaches are common afterwards because of the muscle tightness in the neck and shoulders from the stress. stretching, physical therapy, therapeutic massage , and Tylenol/ibuprofen/alleve/exedrin alone or in combination can probably abort the headaches. they should be taken at symptom onset, not when the pain is severe. use each agent only as directed and no more than three times per week to avoid rebound headaches. the brain has no feeling so nothing was missed on the ct scan. there are other causes of serious headaches that will not show up on ct scans but none of them are headaches which come after vertigo. hope this helps
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Take the medications as directed by prescriber
Detailed Answer:
I can't help you with medications because I don't have your whole medical history or list of medications. there is nothing particularly dangerous about vertigo unless you are driving or crossing a street or something, it is just a bothersome symptom. meclizine helps some people, Valium helps others so it makes sense that klonopin might help because they are the same type of medication. but if some didn't help at all it is probably unlikely that more will help. best thing to do is treat the nausea, go to vestibular rehab with physical therapy, and call the prescribing doctor if the medications aren't working so that you can make treatment decisions together. hope this helps
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