There are many reasons why women in their sixties often experience dizziness, such as because older people do not sleep well or are more anxious and nervous, which may cause patients to feel dizzy and uncomfortable on a regular basis. Patients who have hypertensive disorders, take antihypertensive drugs irregularly, or have large fluctuations in blood pressure are also prone to frequent dizziness and walking dizziness. Women in their sixties may have atherosclerosis of the cerebral arteries, plaque formation, and narrowing of the blood vessels, which may also cause the patient to have insufficient blood supply to the brain, resulting in frequent episodes of dizziness, even accompanied by nausea and vomiting. Women in their sixties should consider the presence of heart disease, which can lead to cardiac insufficiency of cerebral blood supply and reduced blood pumping function of the heart, which can also cause dizziness.