Dizziness is an indefinable topic and a difficult disease to classify, and patients are mostly found in neurology, otorhinolaryngology, orthopedics and cardiology. In fact, real cervical vertigo is rare, but Chinese people think it is caused by cervical spine, I don’t know why? (Even many headache patients think it is caused by cervical spondylosis, I wonder where they get this perception from)? Most patients can be attributed to neurology and otolaryngology. I have also experienced vertigo, so it is good to know which department to see, so please refer to the information below. In ENT, most of the cases are peripheral lesions, with a rapid onset and heavy dizziness (the more severe the dizziness, the more peripheral it may be), accompanied by spinning, sometimes from surrounding objects, and sometimes from oneself, with the feeling of falling down. But the dizziness is very short, a few seconds, sometimes I would like to describe it as a “woo-woo”. Dizziness is often accompanied by nausea, vomiting, excessive sweating, and bowel movements. In neurology, there are mostly brainstem lesions, vertigo without tinnitus, speech problems, swallowing difficulties, fall attacks, hemiparesis, numbness, double vision, unstable walking, etc. It is important to emphasize the point that currently anxiety and depression have a paradigm shift, while many patients have headache and dizziness as clinical manifestations, which should be noted.