Search
SectionsIndexFirst Aid
  • Blood Disorders
  • Bone, Joint, and Muscle Disorders
  • Brain, Spinal Cord, and Nerve Disorders
  • Cancer
  • Children's Health Issues
  • Digestive Disorders
  • Disorders of Nutrition
  • Drugs
  • Ear, Nose, and Throat Disorders
  • Eye Disorders
  • Fundamentals
  • Heart and Blood Vessel Disorders
  • Hormonal and Metabolic Disorders
  • Immune Disorders
  • Infections
  • Injuries and Poisoning
  • Kidney and Urinary Tract Disorders
  • Liver and Gallbladder Disorders
  • Lung and Airway Disorders
  • Men's Health Issues
  • Mental Health Disorders
  • Mouth and Dental Disorders
  • Older People's Health Issues
  • Skin Disorders
  • Special Subjects
  • Women's Health Issues
ABCDEFGHI
JKLMNOPQR
STUVWXYZ
  • Emergencies
  • Cardiac Arrest
  • Choking
  • Drowning
  • Injuries
  • Altitude Illness
  • Bee Stings
  • Bites, Animal
  • Bites, Human
  • Bites, Snake
  • Burns
  • Electrical Injuries
  • Eye, Blunt Injury to
  • Eye, Chemical Burns of
  • Fractures
  • Frostbite
  • Head Injury
  • Heatstroke
  • Hypoithermia
  • Lightning Injuries
  • Shock
  • Sprains and Strains
  • Wounds
In This Topic
Ear, Nose, and Throat Disorders
Middle and Inner Ear Disorders
Meniere's Disease
Diagnosis and Treatment
Back to Top
Resources
  • About The Merck Manual Home Health Handbook Online Version
  • Anatomical Drawings
  • The One-Page Merck Manual of Health
  • Multimedia
  • Pronunciations
  • Selected Links
  • Weights and Measures
  • Common Medical Tests
  • Drug Names: Generic and Trade
  • Resources for Help and Information
Manuals available online
'/professional/index.html' + bookPageLink
 
'/home/index.html'
These and other Manuals available
in print, online, and as mobile applications.

See more at MerckManuals.com
Sections in Patients & Caregivers
  • Blood Disorders
  • Bone, Joint, and Muscle Disorders
  • Brain, Spinal Cord, and Nerve Disorders
  • Cancer
  • Children's Health Issues
  • Digestive Disorders
  • Disorders of Nutrition
  • Drugs
  • Ear, Nose, and Throat Disorders
  • Eye Disorders
  • Fundamentals
  • Heart and Blood Vessel Disorders
  • Hormonal and Metabolic Disorders
  • Immune Disorders
  • Infections
  • Injuries and Poisoning
  • Kidney and Urinary Tract Disorders
  • Liver and Gallbladder Disorders
  • Lung and Airway Disorders
  • Men's Health Issues
  • Mental Health Disorders
  • Mouth and Dental Disorders
  • Older People's Health Issues
  • Skin Disorders
  • Special Subjects
  • Women's Health Issues
Chapters in Ear, Nose, and Throat Disorders
  • Biology of the Ears, Nose, and Throat
  • Symptoms of Nose and Throat Disorders
  • Hearing Loss and Deafness
  • Outer Ear Disorders
  • Middle and Inner Ear Disorders
  • Nose and Sinus Disorders
  • Throat Disorders
  • Nose and Throat Cancers
Topics in Middle and Inner Ear Disorders
  • Overview of the Middle and Inner Ear
  • Eardrum Perforation
  • Barotrauma of the Ear
  • Infectious Myringitis
  • Otitis Media (Acute)
  • Otitis Media (Secretory)
  • Otitis Media (Chronic)
  • Mastoiditis
  • Meniere's Disease
  • Vestibular Neuronitis
  • Temporal Bone Fracture
  • Auditory Nerve Tumors
  • Tinnitus
 
  • Merck Manual
  • >
  • Patients & Caregivers
  • >
  • Ear, Nose, and Throat Disorders
  • >
  • Middle and Inner Ear Disorders
  • 4
 
Meniere's Disease

Share This

Meniere's disease is a disorder characterized by recurring attacks of disabling vertigo (a whirling sensation), hearing loss, and noise in the ear (tinnitus).

  • Symptoms include sudden, unprovoked attacks of severe, disabling vertigo, nausea, and vomiting.
  • Doctors usually perform hearing tests and sometimes magnetic resonance imaging.
  • A low-salt diet and a diuretic may lower the frequency of attacks.
  • Drugs such as meclizineSome Trade Names
    ANTIVERT
    , lorazepamSome Trade Names
    ATIVAN
    , or scopolamineSome Trade Names
    TRANSDERM SCOP
    may help relieve vertigo.

Meniere's disease (also called endolymphatic hydrops) is thought to be caused by an imbalance in the fluid that is normally present in the inner ear. This fluid is continually being secreted and reabsorbed, maintaining a constant amount. Either an increase in production of inner ear fluid or a decrease in its reabsorption results in an imbalance of fluid. Why either happens is not known.

Symptoms include sudden, unprovoked attacks of severe, disabling vertigo, nausea, and vomiting. These symptoms usually last for 2 to 3 hours but can (rarely) last up to 24 hours. Periodically, a person may feel a fullness or pressure in the affected ear. Hearing tends to fluctuate but progressively worsens over the years. Tinnitus, which may be constant or intermittent, may be worse before, during, or after an attack of vertigo. Both hearing loss and tinnitus usually affect only one ear.

In one form of Meniere's disease, hearing loss and tinnitus precede the first attack of vertigo by months or years. After the attacks of vertigo begin, hearing may improve.

Diagnosis and Treatment

A doctor suspects Meniere's disease because of the typical symptoms of vertigo with tinnitus and hearing loss in one ear. Doctors usually perform hearing tests and sometimes magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to look for other causes. A low-salt diet and a diuretic (a drug that increases the excretion of urine) may lower the frequency of attacks in some people. When attacks do occur, vertigo may be relieved temporarily with drugs given by mouth, such as meclizineSome Trade Names
ANTIVERT
, lorazepamSome Trade Names
ATIVAN
, or scopolamineSome Trade Names
TRANSDERM SCOP
. ScopolamineSome Trade Names
TRANSDERM SCOP
is also available in skin patches. Nausea and vomiting may be relieved by suppositories containing the drug prochlorperazine.

Several procedures are available for people who are disabled by frequent attacks of vertigo despite drug treatment. The procedures aim to either reduce fluid pressure in the inner ear or destroy inner ear balance function. The endolymphatic shunt procedure, in which a thin sheet of flexible plastic material is placed in the inner ear, is the least destructive of these procedures. To destroy inner ear balance function, a solution of gentamicin can be injected through the eardrum into the middle ear. Gentamicin selectively destroys balance function before affecting hearing, but hearing loss is still a risk. The risk of hearing loss is lower if doctors inject the gentamicin only once and wait several weeks before repeating if necessary. Cutting the vestibular nerve permanently destroys inner ear balance, while preserving hearing, and is successful 95% of the time in controlling vertigo. This procedure is usually performed on people whose symptoms do not lessen after an endolymphatic shunt or on people who never want to experience another spell of vertigo. Finally, when vertigo is disabling and hearing has deteriorated in the involved ear, the semicircular canals can be drilled away in a procedure called a labyrinthectomy.

None of the surgical procedures that treat vertigo are useful in treating the hearing loss that often accompanies Meniere's disease.

Last full review/revision February 2008 by Richard T. Miyamoto, MD

Buy the Book

Mobile Versions

Pronunciations

meclizine

Meniere's disease

Back to Top

Previous: Mastoiditis

Next: Vestibular Neuronitis

Audio
Figures
Photographs
Pronunciations
Sidebar
Tables
Videos

Copyright     © 2010-2013 Merck Sharp & Dohme Corp., a subsidiary of Merck & Co., Inc., Whitehouse Station, N.J., U.S.A.    Privacy    Terms of Use