What Happens
An attack of
Ménière's disease causes symptoms of
tinnitus (ringing in the ears), hearing loss, a
feeling of pressure or fullness in the ear, and
vertigo (spinning sensation).
The attacks
are unpredictable and vary in frequency and severity. An attack can last from
hours to days. Most people have repeated attacks over a period of years.
Attacks usually increase in frequency during the first few years of the disease
but then decrease in frequency.
Vertigo may be severe and result
in nausea and vomiting. To reduce this feeling, try lying perfectly still until
the attack subsides.
Sometimes, each additional attack damages the
inner ear. Eventually the inner ear becomes so badly damaged that it may no
longer function properly.1 The attacks will then
usually stop, but you may have:
- Poor balance.
- Permanent hearing
loss.
- Residual roaring or hissing in the affected ear.
Ménière's disease normally occurs in only one ear at a
time. In as many as half of the people affected, the disease eventually
develops in the other ear.
A few people with Ménière's disease
experience "drop attacks." A drop attack is a sudden fall while standing or
walking. The falls occur without warning, and the attacks are described as
suddenly being pushed to the ground. There is usually no loss of consciousness,
and complete recovery occurs in seconds or minutes.