The incidence of Ménière’s disease is increasing every year. It occurs mostly in developed countries and among urban dwellers, and less frequently in colder regions. It is mostly seen in young adults. There are four main symptoms of Ménière’s disease: vertigo, deafness, tinnitus and a feeling of fullness in the ear. 1. Vertigo is a sudden, severe, rotating vertigo. Patients feel that they or the surrounding objects rotate violently in a certain direction and in a certain plane, so much so that they must lie down with their eyes closed to prevent falling due to loss of balance and to relieve their fear. Some patients feel that their bodies sway from side to side, rise and fall, and float. The vertigo is accompanied by nausea, vomiting, pallor, cold sweat, drop in blood pressure or even or abdominal pain and other vegetative reflex symptoms. The symptoms are aggravated when the eyes are opened and the head is turned, and alleviated when the eyes are closed or when the patient is lying down, and the patient prefers to lie down with the eyes closed and the head fixed in a certain position. During the whole course of the attack, the patient is conscious and remains awake even if the individual suddenly falls down. The vertigo lasts for a short period of time, tens of minutes or hours, and then the symptoms disappear and the patient goes into the intermittent period. The intermittent period is mostly free of other symptoms except for hearing impairment. The length of the intermittent period varies from person to person, from a few days to several years. Vertigo is often recurrent, and the more recurrences and the longer the duration, the shorter the intermittent period. The degree of vertigo is more intense, but it varies greatly from person to person, and each episode is not the same. The literature reports that about one-third of patients have aura symptoms during vertigo attacks. These include dizziness and irritability, deep discomfort and fullness in the affected ear, tinnitus or a change in the nature of the existing tinnitus, and low-frequency hearing loss. In patients with aura, if the attack is mild, the patient can react protectively by sitting or lying down. When the patient feels that he or she is spinning uncontrollably during the attack, he or she often grabs fixed objects and does not let go, fearing that he or she will turn in space and fall. 2. Deafness The deafness of this disease is sensorineural deafness. The early stage of the disease is mostly low-frequency hearing (125-500 Hz) loss, which can be fluctuating. It can return to normal in the interval of vertigo attack. In case of recurrent attacks of vertigo and long duration of the disease, the range of hearing damage gradually expands, and both low-frequency and high-frequency (2-8 kHz) hearing can be damaged and cannot be recovered. The general tendency of hearing damage is to deteriorate with the increase of the number of attacks. There is also a very specific phenomenon of hearing change, and that is the phenomenon of rehearing. This is when the patient listens to strong high-frequency sounds with unbearable harshness. Sometimes the affected ear and the healthy ear will hear the same sound as two different sounds. 3. Tinnitus can start as a persistent low-pitched sound of blowing wind or running water, and then turn into a high-pitched sound of cicadas or steam whistles. It may appear suddenly or intensify before the onset of vertigo. The intermittent tinnitus disappears. It can be persistent in those who have been ill for a long time. 4.Sense of ear fullness During the period of vertigo attack, some patients have a sense of fullness, heaviness and pressure in the affected head or ear, and sometimes feel burning or dull pain around the ear. Based on experience, this manifestation is not common.