Describe the epidemiology.
Sex: ♀ ≥ ♂
Onset: 20–60 years of age
Peak incidence: 40–50 years
Prevalence: 50–200 in 100,000 individuals in the US
Describe the causes.
Idiopathic
Several etiologies have been proposed, including:
Viral infections
Autoimmune disease
Inner ear autoimmune disease
Systemic autoimmune disease
Allergies
Describe the pathophysiology.
All patients with Meniere disease have impaired endolymph resorption that results in endolymph hydrops. However, not all patients with endolymphatic hydrops have symptoms of Meniere disease. The cause of impaired resorption is unknown. There are currently two main theories about why some patients develop symptoms:
Endolymph hydrops: accumulation of fluid in the endolymphatic sac.
Rupture theory: fluid accumulation in the endolymphatic sac → tear in the Reissner membrane → increased perilymphatic potassium → depolarization of the afferent acoustic nerve fibers → symptom onset
Compression theory: impaired endolymph resorption → compression of the semicircular canals → symptom onset
The endolymph is rich in potassium and perilymph is rich in sodium. In Meniere disease, the concentration of potassium in the perilymph increases.
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