What causes vomiting with hearing loss?

Vomiting with hearing loss may be associated with diseases such as sudden deafness, Meniere’s disease, and acoustic neuroma.
1. Sudden deafness: this disease is a sudden, unexplained sensorineural hearing loss. It is characterized by sudden hearing loss, tinnitus, stuffiness in the ears, dizziness before or after hearing loss, mostly rotational dizziness, and a few bumps and unsteadiness, which may be accompanied by cold sweat, nausea, and vomiting.
2. Ménière’s disease: This disease is a kind of inner ear disease with the main pathological change of membrane labyrinth accumulation, which can manifest as fluctuating hearing loss, tinnitus, stuffy and swollen ears, and episodic vertigo, etc. It is often accompanied by nausea, vomiting and dizziness. It is often accompanied by autonomic reflex symptoms such as nausea, vomiting, pallor, cold sweat, slow pulse, and decreased blood pressure.
3 Auditory neuroma: It is a tumor growing on the nerve sheath membrane of vestibular fossa. Tinnitus, sensorineural deafness and vertigo can be the most common early symptoms of this disease. In a few patients, transient rotational vertigo, accompanied by pressure in the ear, nausea, vomiting, similar to Meniere’s disease.
When vomiting with hearing impairment occurs, you can actively seek medical attention, systematic examination to clarify the diagnosis, and follow the doctor’s instructions to standardize the treatment.