How does Meniere disease manifest?
Meniere disease characteristically manifests as recurrent episodes of acute, unilateral symptoms that last from minutes to hours.
Describe the Meniere triad.
Peripheral vertigo
Tinnitus
Asymmetric fluctuating sensorineural hearing loss (SNHL)
Low to mid-frequency hearing loss that progressively worsens with each episode
May progress to deafness over several years
Tuning fork tests [3]
Weber test: lateralization to the healthy ear
Rinne test: bilaterally positive
List additional symptoms.
Spontaneous horizontal or horizontal rotatory nystagmus
Seen in some patients during an acute episode of Meniere disease
The direction of nystagmus is variable and can change .
Can be supressed by visual fixation
Nausea and vomiting
Ear fullness
Describe triggers and progression.
Definitive triggers of Meniere disease are not known to exist
Episodes fluctuate in severity and typically last from 20 minutes to 12 hours
Periods of remission between attacks vary from months to years.
In 10–25% of patients, the disease becomes bilateral.
Last changed2 years ago