Condition Guide
Understanding Ménière's Disease
A chronic inner ear disorder causing unpredictable episodes of vertigo, fluctuating hearing loss, tinnitus, and ear fullness — manageable with the right specialist care.
🌀 What is Ménière's Disease?
Definition
Ménière's disease is a chronic disorder of the inner ear (labyrinth) characterised by abnormal fluid buildup — known as endolymphatic hydrops — in the fluid-filled chambers of the cochlea and vestibular system.
This excess pressure disrupts normal hearing and balance signals, triggering the hallmark combination of spontaneous vertigo attacks, fluctuating hearing loss, ringing in the ears (tinnitus), and a feeling of fullness or pressure in the ear.
The exact cause remains under research, but the condition typically follows a relapsing-remitting pattern — attacks can be separated by months of complete calm, only to return unexpectedly. Over years, hearing loss may become permanent in the affected ear.
The Classic Ménière's Tetrad
🌀 Vertigo
🔇Hearing Loss
Fluctuating, low-frequency sensorineural hearing loss
🔔Tinnitus
👂 Aural Fullness
⚠️ Common Symptoms
Recognising Ménière's Disease
Symptoms typically occur in episodes and can range from mildly disabling to severely incapacitating. Each patient's experience is unique.
🌀
Spontaneous Vertigo Attacks
🔇
Fluctuating Hearing Loss
🔔
Roaring Tinnitus
👂
Ear Pressure or Fullness
🤢
Nausea & Vomiting
🦶
Post-Attack Imbalance
⚡
Drop Attacks (Tumarkin Crises)
😰
Anxiety Between Episodes
📊 Disease Progression
Stages of Ménière's Disease
Early Stage
Fluctuating
Distinct vertigo attacks with fluctuating hearing loss and aural fullness. Hearing typically recovers between episodes. Tinnitus may be intermittent.
Middle Stage
Progressive
Attacks continue. Hearing loss becomes less reversible between episodes. Tinnitus and aural fullness are more persistent. Anxiety and lifestyle impact increase.
Late Stage
Established
Vertigo attacks may paradoxically reduce in frequency. However, significant permanent hearing loss, chronic imbalance, and tinnitus often persist.
🔍 Risk Factors
Who Gets Ménière’s Disease?
- While the exact cause remains unknown, several factors are associated with higher risk of developing Ménière’s disease.
- Most commonly affects adults between 40–60 years of age
- Slightly more frequent in women than men
- Family history increases risk — genetic factors are under investigation
- Associated with autoimmune disorders (e.g., rheumatoid arthritis, thyroid disease)
- Prior inner ear infections or viral illnesses affecting the labyrinth
- Migraineurs have a significantly higher incidence of Ménière’s
- High dietary sodium intake is a recognised aggravating factor
- Chronic stress, poor sleep, and caffeine excess can trigger episodes
- Bilateral disease (both ears) occurs in approximately 15–40% of patients over time
