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Neurology and Balance: Diagnosing and Treating the Causes of Vertigo Effectively

Neurologist assessing a patient with balance issues during vertigo evaluation

Reviewed By:

Neurology Doctor (Kolkata)

Dr. Madhuparna Paul

Neurology Doctor (Siliguri)

Dr. Shveta Gupta Dr. Anurup Saha

Have you ever stood up too quickly after an afternoon nap and felt the whole room tilt for a second or two? That short spin is something almost all of us have felt at some point. For some people, though, it does not pass in a moment. The room keeps moving, the stomach turns, and even walking to the kitchen suddenly feels risky.

That spinning feeling has a name. We call it vertigo.

In this guide, I will walk you through what vertigo really is, the common vertigo symptoms, the reasons for dizziness, and the vertigo treatment options that actually work. Think of it as the same conversation we would have if you were sitting across the table from me in the clinic.

Here is the quick answer first. Vertigo is not a disease on its own. It is a symptom, and it usually points to a problem in your inner ear or, less often, your brain. The good news? Most cases are very treatable.

What Is Vertigo, and Why Does It Make You Feel Off-Balance?

So, what is vertigo exactly? Vertigo is the false sensation that you, or the world around you, is spinning when nothing is actually moving.

Your sense of balance depends on a tiny, clever system inside your inner ear called the vestibular system. It works a little like the spirit level a mason uses while laying floor tiles. When the fluid and the tiny crystals inside this system move the way they should, your brain knows exactly where your head is. When something goes wrong, your brain gets confusing signals, and that mix-up shows up as head spinning and unsteadiness.

In short, it is your balance system sending the wrong message. Nothing more, nothing less.

Many people search online for “vertigo disease”, expecting one single illness. But the honest truth is that vertigo is almost always a sign of another condition, not a disease in itself. Dizziness, including vertigo, is one of the most common reasons people visit a doctor, affecting roughly 15% to 20% of adults in any given year, so you are far from alone.

What Is the Difference Between Vertigo and Plain Dizziness?

People often use “dizziness” and “vertigo” to mean the same thing. They are related, but they are not identical.

Dizziness is a broad word. It can mean feeling light-headed, faint, or simply a bit unsteady on your feet. Vertigo is a specific type of dizziness where there is a clear spinning sensation, as if the room is turning around you.

Here is a simple way to tell them apart:

Feature

General dizziness

Vertigo

What you feel

Light-headed, woozy, about to faint

The room is clearly spinning

Common trigger

Standing up fast, low blood sugar, dehydration

Moving your head or rolling over in bed

Usual source

Blood pressure, heart, anxiety

Inner ear or, less often, the brain

Movement

You may feel faint while sitting still

Spinning continues even when still

Why does this matter? Because the reasons for dizziness and the reasons for vertigo can be quite different, and so can the treatment.

What Are the Common Vertigo Symptoms to Watch For?

Vertigo rarely comes alone. Most patients describe a small cluster of vertigo symptoms that show up together rather than just one.

Common vertigo symptoms include:

  • A spinning or tilting sensation, sometimes even while sitting still

  • Nausea or vomiting (many of my patients say it feels like sea-sickness on a boat)

  • Loss of balance and a real fear of falling

  • A ringing sound in the ear, known as tinnitus

  • A feeling of fullness or heaviness in head and ears

  • Hearing changes, often in just one ear

Sweating and rapid, jerky eye movements

A short burst of head spinning when you roll over in bed or look up to reach a high shelf is the classic sign of the most common type of vertigo. We will come to that in a moment.

What Are the Main Vertigo Causes and Reasons for Dizziness?

Now to the part everyone wants answered. What are the real vertigo causes?

Doctors divide vertigo into two broad groups: peripheral, which means the inner ear, and central, which means the brain. Around 80% of all cases are peripheral, which is usually the more reassuring group.

Peripheral Causes: when the problem sits in your inner ear

This is the most common bucket, and often the least worrying. The main reasons for dizziness here are:

  • BPPV (benign paroxysmal positional vertigo): the number one cause. Tiny calcium crystals slip out of place and float into the wrong canal of your inner ear. In one study from a tertiary hospital in eastern India, BPPV made up nearly 27% of all vertigo patients.

  • Vestibular neuritis or labyrinthitis: usually after a viral infection, like a heavy cold or the flu.

  • Meniere’s disease: a build-up of fluid in the inner ear, often with hearing loss and a ringing sound.

Central Causes: When the brain is involved

These are less common, but they are the ones we are most careful not to miss. They include:

  • Migraine, especially vestibular migraine, which is very common and often overlooked

  • Stroke or reduced blood flow to the brain

  • Head injury

  • Multiple sclerosis or, rarely, a tumour such as an acoustic neuroma

Other everyday reasons for dizziness include low blood pressure when you stand up, uncontrolled diabetes, certain medicines, dehydration, and long spells of bed rest.

Could that heaviness in head be linked to vertigo?

Many patients sit down and tell me, “Doctor, it is not exactly spinning, but there is a constant heaviness in head.” This can happen with vestibular migraine, sinus trouble, anxiety, or simply the recovery phase after a vertigo attack. A heaviness in head on its own is rarely dangerous. But if it arrives alongside the red-flag signs further down, please do not brush it off.

How Do Doctors Diagnose a Vertigo Problem?

When you come to us with a vertigo problem, we do not rush you straight into expensive scans. We start by listening.

The first step is simply your story. How long does each spin last, a few seconds or several hours? Does it start when you turn your head? Is there any hearing loss with it? Your answers tell us a great deal before we even examine you.

Then we may carry out a few simple bedside tests:

Test

What it checks

Dix-Hallpike test

Triggers and confirms BPPV by watching your eye movements

Head impulse test

Checks the balance reflex inside your inner ear

Romberg’s test

Looks for a central cause in the brain or spinal cord

Fukuda-Unterberger test

Marching in place with eyes shut to spot inner-ear imbalance

Only when we suspect a central cause do we order an MRI or a CT scan. For most patients with simple inner-ear vertigo, no scan is needed at all.

What Are the Best Vertigo Treatment Options?

Vertigo treatment is often simple, quick, and done right there in the clinic.

The right vertigo treatment depends entirely on the cause. These are the main options we use:

Repositioning Manoeuvres

For BPPV, the best treatment is not a tablet at all. It is a series of gentle, guided head movements called the Epley manoeuvre, which coaxes those loose crystals back to where they belong. It is quick, and it works for roughly 8 out of 10 people. I can perform it in the clinic, and I can also teach you a safe home version to use if symptoms return.

Vertigo Medication

For sudden, severe attacks, short-term medicines such as betahistine, meclizine or an antihistamine can calm the spinning and the nausea. One word of caution: these are meant for just a few days. Taken for too long, they can actually slow your recovery.

Vestibular Rehabilitation Therapy (vertigo exercises)

If your balance has not fully settled, a trained physiotherapist can guide you through specific vertigo exercises. These retrain your brain and your other senses to work around the faulty signals. Think of it as physiotherapy for your balance system.

Surgery

Surgery is rare. We only consider it when a serious underlying cause, such as a tumour, is driving the vertigo and other treatments have not helped.

How Can You Manage Head Spinning at Home?

While you wait to see a doctor, there are safe things you can do at home to ease the head spinning:

  • Sit or lie down the moment a spin begins

  • Move slowly, especially when getting out of bed or turning your head

  • Sleep with your head raised on two pillows

  • Rest in a calm, dimly lit room during a strong attack

  • Keep a night light on so you are not moving about in the dark

  • Use a walking stick if you feel unsteady on your feet

  • Drink enough water through the day, since our Indian summers make dehydration a sneaky trigger

These steps will not cure the cause, but they do lower your risk of a fall while your body recovers.

When Should You See a Doctor for Vertigo?

Most vertigo is harmless and settles with the right care. But some warning signs need urgent attention, and it is worth knowing them.

Please go to the nearest emergency room, or call for help, if your vertigo comes with any of these:

  • A sudden, severe headache unlike any you have had before

  • Weakness or numbness in an arm, leg or one side of the face

  • Slurred speech or trouble getting your words out

  • Double vision or a sudden change in eyesight

  • Chest pain or a racing, pounding heartbeat

  • Difficulty walking or severe loss of balance

  •  A high fever with a stiff neck

These can be signs of a stroke or another serious problem, and minutes truly matter.

For vertigo that keeps coming back, or that is getting in the way of your work, driving or sleep, do book a proper consultation. At UniClinic, our neurology and ENT teams work side by side to pin down the exact cause of your vertigo and build a treatment plan that fits your life. You do not have to live with the world spinning around you.

Bothered by vertigo or repeated dizziness? Book an appointment with the UniClinic neurology team today. The sooner we find the cause, the sooner you feel steady on your feet again.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

1. What is the fastest way to stop a vertigo attack?

Sit or lie down at once and keep your head as still as you can. Fix your eyes on one steady point in the room. For BPPV, the Epley manoeuvre done by a doctor often stops symptoms quickly. Short-term medicines can ease severe nausea, but always check with your doctor first.

2. Can vertigo go away on its own?

Yes, many cases do settle on their own as the brain slowly adjusts. BPPV may clear within a few weeks, and vertigo after a viral infection often improves over a few days. But if it keeps returning or feels severe, you should get it properly checked.

3. What are the most common reasons for dizziness and vertigo?

The single most common cause is BPPV, where loose crystals in the inner ear send the brain wrong signals. Other frequent reasons for dizziness include low blood pressure, dehydration, migraine, inner-ear infections and Meniere’s disease.

4. Is vertigo a sign of a serious disease?

Usually not. Most vertigo comes from the inner ear and is harmless. But when it appears with weakness, slurred speech, a severe headache or sudden vision changes, it can point to a stroke, so seek emergency care straight away.

5. Why do I feel a heaviness in head along with dizziness?

A heaviness in head with dizziness is often linked to vestibular migraine, sinus problems, anxiety, or simply the recovery phase after a vertigo episode. If it is persistent or comes with any red-flag signs, please see a doctor.

6. Which doctor should I see for a vertigo problem?

Start with a neurologist or an ENT specialist. They can run simple balance tests, find the cause behind your vertigo problem and recommend the right treatment, from repositioning manoeuvres to vestibular therapy.

References and Citations

Neuhauser HK, et al. Epidemiology of vestibular vertigo: a neurotologic survey of the general population. Neurology. 2005. 

Neuhauser HK. The epidemiology of dizziness and vertigo. Handbook of Clinical Neurology. 2016. 

Benign Paroxysmal Positional Vertigo. StatPearls, NCBI Bookshelf. 2025. 

Epidemiology of benign paroxysmal positional vertigo and risk factors for secondary BPPV: a population-based study (Eastern India). The Egyptian Journal of Otolaryngology. 2023. 

Benign Paroxysmal Positional Vertigo (BPPV). Johns Hopkins Medicine. 

Vertigo: Causes, Symptoms, and Treatment. WebMD. 2024. 

 Epley Maneuver: A Treatment for Vertigo. Medical News Today. 2017


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