Dizziness Depot

Oct. 16, 2012

Beauty Queens and Audiologists

Alan Desmond
Is a Beauty Queen Smarter than an Audiologist? A few years ago, a poor young lady competing in the 2007 Miss USA Teen Pageant had a classic brain freeze moment. When asked why she thought one of five Americans can’t locate the U.S. on a map, she responded: “I personally believe that U.S. Americans are unable to do so because, uh,
Oct. 09, 2012

Lightning Strike and Dizziness

Alan Desmond
Interesting Case Last week, I saw a very pleasant, intelligent young man referred to me for chronic imbalance and falling. He was a healthy, active man until a mobile home he was working on was struck by lightning several years ago. In addition to numerous other issues, he complained of bothersome bilateral tinnitus, but no appreciable hearing loss. The tinnitus
Oct. 02, 2012

Best of Dizziness Depot: Role of Audiometry in Vestibular Testing

Alan Desmond
“Why are you doing a hearing test? My hearing is just fine.” I’ve heard this frequently enough over the years that I know to take a minute to explain to every vestibular patient, before we get started, why we require an audiogram. I keep it pretty straightforward and simple: “We do a quick hearing test on every patient complaining of
Sep. 25, 2012

Best of Dizziness Depot: Blood Pressure and Dizziness

Alan Desmond
Many patients complain of dizziness or light headedness on rising from the sitting or supine position. Postural dizziness has been loosely correlated with postural or orthostatic hypotension (OH). The American Academy of Neurology (1996) has issued a consensus statement defining orthostatic hypotension which can be found here in a later post. There is some inconsistency in both education and practice
Sep. 18, 2012

Red Wine and Fall Risk

Alan Desmond
My worlds are colliding. By day, I am a nebbish vestibular specialist doing my darndest to figure out why people are falling over, or spinning around, or getting faint when they stand up. By night, I am an untrained, but passionate amateur aspiring wannabe sommelier and chef, pairing a Brunello with a Bolognese, or a Temperanillo with a Tagliatelle. Different
Sep. 11, 2012

Hearing Loss and Fall Risk: More Questions than Answers

Alan Desmond
Last week I posted a short blurb about a recent Johns Hopkins study linking hearing loss and fall risk. The study claims that people with even mild hearing loss have a three times greater risk of falling, and that the risk increases as the hearing loss increases. Well, I operate a practice called Blue Ridge Hearing and Balance Clinic, and
Sep. 04, 2012

Hearing Loss and Fall Risk

Alan Desmond
Researchers at John’s Hopkins have recently published a study that links hearing loss to increased risk of falling. This information needs to be viewed from multiple perspectives. First, it adds to the list of consequential or associated issues that patients with hearing loss may suffer. Second, despite several different “risk factor” lists from several different specialty societies, this is the
Aug. 28, 2012

Treatments for Meniere’s disease: Fact, Fiction, or Biological Plausibility, Part X

Alan Desmond
                           Gentamicin Risks This is the final installment in this series, and I intentionally finish with Intra-Tympanic Gentamicin (ITG) because it appears to be the most effective technique in managing the frequency and severity of episodic vertigo caused by Meniere’s disease. More recently, some physicians are using very low doses of ITG, and report fewer side effects. In short, the
Aug. 22, 2012

Treatments for Meniere’s disease: Fact, Fiction or Biological Plausibility-Part IX

Alan Desmond
                                      Gentamicin Intra-Tympanic Gentamicin (ITG) is considered an “ablative” procedure. While most of the treatments discussed in the earlier blogs in this series are intended to “repair” or regulate the fluid dynamics of the diseased labyrinth, ITG does not have the same goal. When the diagnosis is certain, the diseased ear has been identified, and the patient has not responded
Aug. 14, 2012

Meniere’s disease: Fact, Fiction or Biological Plausibility, Part VIII

Alan Desmond
Meniere’s disease and herbal supplements     Over the Counter Supplements 1. pla•ce•bo/pləˈsēbō/ Noun: 1. A harmless pill, medicine, or procedure prescribed more for the psychological benefit to the patient than for any physiological effect. 2. A substance that has no therapeutic effect, used as a control in testing new drugs. I figured I would start by providing the definition of