What causes vertigo in people

The causes of human vertigo can be clinically typed as follows according to their anatomical parts: firstly, vestibular peripheral vertigo is the majority in clinical practice, estimated to account for 70%-80%, common diseases include otoliths, also known as benign paroxysmal positional vertigo, which is mainly the sudden onset of vertigo when the patient’s body position is fixed to a certain position for less than a minute or so, and the patient is usually not accompanied by Patients usually do not have tinnitus and other related changes, and patients will have obvious effect if they are clinically given postural repositioning treatment, while others have vertigo such as sudden deafness with vertigo, Meniere’s syndrome, vestibular neuritis, etc. The second kind, vestibular central vertigo is also found in many clinical cases, such as hemorrhage in the brainstem area, cerebral infarction, tumors in the brain, meningitis and other related diseases. The third type, non-vestibular systemic vertigo, is common in patients with vertigo induced by other causes such as hypertension, hypotension, hypoglycemia, cervical spondylosis, etc.