Patient : Description of the condition (time of onset, main symptoms, hospital visited, etc.).
The patient is female, 61 years old, had a few times in previous years, vertigo, every one or two days, but this time has been more than half a month, head afraid to move, brain and cervical spine MRI, the doctor said that the cervical spine is a little herniated, but should not be serious, there is a small section of the brain blood vessels thin, the doctor said that the blood vessels are a little hardened, mild brain atrophy, in the hospital has been hospitalized for more than 10 days, no improvement
The hospital every day to hang a pulse or something, nothing effect, but the condition is getting more and more serious, and now the face are numb. Wang Yue: It depends on what kind of symptoms you have. Vertigo: It is often characterized by sudden and intermittent sensations of rotation, tumbling, floating or drifting of external objects and (or) oneself in a certain direction (not relieved by closing the eyes). Emphasis is placed on a kinesthetic hallucination, the subjective perception of an objectively nonexistent self or outside world in motion. The etiology is due to lesions of the vestibular canal or vestibular nerve. It is often aggravated by changes in head position and eye opening. Depending on the location of the lesion, it can be accompanied by nausea, vomiting, palpitations, sweating and weakness, as well as nystagmus and orientation tilting. o Dizziness: The main symptom is persistent dizziness and lack of clarity, accompanied by head weight, dullness, head swelling, amnesia, weakness and other neurological symptoms or symptoms of chronic somatic diseases, aggravated by exertion. It is caused by neurological diseases or chronic somatic diseases, etc. Dizziness: intermittent or persistent light-headedness and unsteadiness, mostly aggravated by walking, sitting or using the eyes, between dizziness and vertigo, with a sense of halt but not to the extent of motor hallucinations. From your symptoms the first case is more likely. Since you have no major problems with brain and cervical MRI, it means that it is not central vertigo, but related to the peripheral vestibular system. I among them benign episodic vertigo has a higher incidence, and in recent years the clinic has paid more attention to this disease. I suggest you go to a regular hospital that preferably has an otologic vertigo clinic, and you can do an evoked test (Dix-Hallpike test). Now you can take oral medications such as Mineralon tablets and Cipro.