Vertigo has different clinical manifestations depending on the cause. Some patients present with true vertigo and some with pseudovertigo. True vertigo consists of two main types: peripheral vertigo and central vertigo. Peripheral vertigo such as: 1. Meniere’s disease, characterized by episodes of vertigo with tinnitus, hearing loss and nystagmus, and in severe cases, nausea, vomiting, pallor and sweating; 2. vestibular neuronitis, which mostly occurs suddenly after fever or respiratory infection, accompanied by nausea and vomiting; 3. motion sickness, which is common in seasickness and motion sickness, accompanied by nausea, vomiting and pallor. Central vertigo such as intracranial vascular disease, mostly with vertigo, headache, tinnitus and other symptoms. Pseudovertigo includes three kinds: systemic disease vertigo, oculogenic vertigo and neuropsychiatric vertigo. Vertigo caused by cardiovascular diseases will be accompanied by changes in blood pressure, heart rate and heart rhythm; vertigo caused by blood diseases will show symptoms such as anemia and bleeding; neuropsychiatric vertigo may show symptoms such as headache, dizziness, insomnia and dreaminess, chest tightness and shortness of breath. Thus, it can be seen that the clinical manifestations of vertigo are different according to the causes. Each disease has its own specific clinical manifestations, and vertigo is only a concomitant symptom.