Meniere Disease
from: MedicineToday 2014; 15(3): 18-26
Hallmark of Acute Attack:
- Prolonged vertigo
- Sudden, intense sensation of movement (usually spinning)
- Lasts at least 20 minutes
- Accompanied by nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, sweating
Vertigo Characteristics:
- Vertigo lasting a few seconds or minutes: likely BPPV
- Vertigo lasting 8-12+ hours: vestibular neuritis or cerebellar stroke
- Light-headedness, balance disturbances: non-otological causes (e.g., postural hypotension, hyperglycemia, panic attacks)
Early Stage:
- Vertigo symptoms prominent
- Minor, unnoticed fluctuations in hearing
Middle Stage:
- More marked fluctuating hearing loss (low tones)
- Permanent hearing loss may persist between attacks
Late Stage:
- Permanent, nonfluctuating hearing loss
- Attacks of vertigo lessen
- Dominant symptom: hearing loss (‘burnt out’ Ménière’s disease)
- Tinnitus becomes more prominent
- Drop attacks (sudden loss of balance without losing consciousness)
Natural History:
- Highly variable
- Vertigo attacks: daily clusters over weeks or isolated episodes with remissions lasting months or years
- Later stages: vertigo episodes ‘burn out,’ severe hearing loss dominates
- Long-term: 30%-45% develop the disease in the contralateral ear within 30 years
Variants:
- Classical Ménière’s: vertigo precedes hearing loss
- Lermoyez syndrome: hearing loss precedes vertigo and improves after vertigo attacks
- Cochlear hydrops: fluctuation in hearing thresholds with tinnitus and fullness but no vertigo
Epidemiology:
- Prevalence rates: 3.5 to 513 per 100,000 population
- More common in women
- Prevalence increases with age, peaks at 60-69 years
- Rare in people younger than 20 years
Pathophysiology – Current Understanding:
- Episodic disturbances of endolymph formation and resorption
- Failure of complex inner ear homeostasis caused by various pathologies
- Causes: autoimmune diseases, viral infections, trauma, allergy, hormonal changes, unknown causes
Differential Diagnosis
- Basilar Migraine: Vertigo without aural symptoms.
- Vestibular Neuronitis: Vertigo for several days, no aural symptoms.
- Benign Paroxysmal Positional Vertigo (BPPV): Vertigo related to head movements, no aural symptoms.
- Medications: Aminoglycosides, loop diuretics.
- Central Vertigo: Stroke, multiple sclerosis, seizure disorder.
- Peripheral Vertigo: Non-otogenic origin (e.g., peripheral neuropathy).
- Orthostatic Hypotension: Described as “dizziness” by patients.
- Neoplasm: Vestibular schwannoma, meningioma, malignancy.
- Infectious Causes: Meningitis, syphilis, HIV cerebritis.
Diagnosis
Diagnosis Criteria (Barany Society):
- Definite Meniere Disease:
- Two or more episodes of vertigo (20 minutes to 12 hours).
- Low- to medium-frequency sensorineural hearing loss in one ear.
- Fluctuating aural symptoms (fullness, hearing, tinnitus) in the affected ear.
- No better explanation by other vestibular diagnoses.
- Probable Meniere Disease:
- Two or more episodes of dizziness/vertigo (20 minutes to 24 hours).
- Fluctuating aural symptoms in the affected ear.
- Better explained by another vestibular diagnosis.
Clinical Examination:
- History:
- Character of vertigo (differentiate true vertigo from imbalance or presyncope).
- Hearing loss, duration of episodes, positional triggers.
- Family history of hearing and balance problems.
- Physical Examination:
- Comprehensive neurologic examination.
- Cranial nerves, peripheral sensation, gait, cerebellar testing, Romberg, Fukuda, pronator drift tests.
- Rinne and Weber Tests: Assess auditory nerve function.
- Frenzel Goggles: Identify nystagmus.
- Dix-Hallpike Maneuver: Differentiate BPPV.
Between Attacks:
- Unilateral sensorineural hearing loss or bilateral asymmetrical hearing loss
- Romberg’s and Unterberger’s stepping tests may show mild disturbance of balance
During Acute Attack:
- Patients appear unwell, sweaty, pale, nauseated, vomiting
- Horizontal nystagmus that changes direction as the attack progresses
Investigations:
- Pure Tone Audiogram: Sensorineural hearing loss, commonly low tones
- Vestibular Function Tests: For atypical cases or bilateral disease
- Electrocochleography: Confirms diagnosis in atypical cases
- Imaging (MRI, CT): Exclude acoustic neuromas and other intracranial pathologies
Differential Diagnosis
Common Causes of Disturbed Balance:
- Nonvestibular Causes:
- Light-headedness, disorientation, floating
- Vestibular Causes:
- True vertigo (spinning, rocking, tilting)
Conditions Mimicking Ménière’s Disease:
- Vestibular Migraine:
- Common and may mimic Ménière’s disease
- Herpes Zoster, Ramsay Hunt Syndrome:
- Pain, vertigo, hearing loss, vesicles in the ear canal
- Meningitis, Carcinoma, Lymphoma, Sarcoid:
- Vestibular and cochlear dysfunction with other cranial nerve lesions
- Vasculitides:
- Ear- and eye-specific syndromes (Cogan’s syndrome, Susac’s syndrome)
- Brainstem Lesions:
- Vestibular nerve root or nucleus involvement (e.g., multiple sclerosis)
Management
Goals:
- Reduce frequency and severity of symptoms
- Improve quality of life for patients and families
Acute Vertiginous Attacks:
- Safety Strategies:
- While driving or in dangerous situations
- Allow Attack to Pass:
- Recovery may take a day or two
Support:
- Meniere’s Australia: Patient information and reassurance
- Vestibular Rehabilitation: Referral: For exercises to improve balance and reduce vertigo symptoms.
Lifestyle and Dietary Changes:
- Low-Salt Diet: 1-2 g/day, avoid salty foods, processed and fast foods
- Reducing Caffeine, Chocolate, Alcohol: Beneficial for some patients
- Regular Exercise: 30 minutes brisk walk, three to five days a week
Medications:
- Betahistine:
- Mainstay treatment to reduce the frequency and severity of vertigo attacks.
- Histamine analogue, 8-32 mg/day, starting with 16 mg twice daily
- Diuretics:
- Hydrochlorothiazide, frusemide, spironolactone
- Helps in reducing fluid retention, thereby preventing endolymphatic hydrops.
- Corticosteroids:
- Oral prednisone 1 mg/kg/day for 10 days or intratympanic dexamethasone 4 mg single dose
- Acute Management:
- Antiemetics (e.g., Promethazine, Metoclopramide): For nausea control.
- Antihistamines (e.g., Diphenhydramine, Meclizine): For short-term use during acute episodes.
Hearing Aids and Tinnitus Management:
- Self-Programming Hearing Aids: Adjustable to current hearing thresholds
- Cochlear Implants: Effective for severe hearing loss
- Tinnitus Management: Education, sound therapy, short-term drug therapy, tinnitus retraining therapy, cognitive behavioral therapy
Semi-Invasive and Surgical Treatments:
- Grommets (Tympanostomy Tubes): Simple, temporary, low-risk procedure
- Micropressure Therapy: Pressure pulses to the inner ear via a portable pressure generator
- Aminoglycoside Treatment (Gentamicin): Chemical labyrinthectomy, transtympanic injection, permanent effect on vestibular hair cells, small risk of hearing loss
- Endolymphatic Sac Surgery: Declined in popularity, no better than placebo
- Labyrinthectomy and Vestibular Nerve Section: Complete unilateral surgical deafferentation, effective but high risk, replaced by transtympanic gentamicin
Role of the GP
- Recognize and differentiate Ménière’s from other causes of vertigo
- Provide education on disease management
- Refer to a specialist for diagnosis and treatment plan
Conclusion
- Ménière’s disease can be frightening and sudden
- Later stages: hearing loss and tinnitus become more intrusive
- Diagnosis: careful history and simple audiogram
- Management: stepwise treatment plan involving lifestyle changes, medication, and potentially surgery
Practice Points
- Ménière’s disease: recurrent vertigo, fluctuating hearing loss, tinnitus, aural fullness
- Prevalence increases with age, peaks at 60-69 years, rare under 20 years
- Differential diagnosis includes migraine-associated vertigo
- Management: lifestyle changes, medical and surgical interventions
- Vertigo control achievable in most patients within two years