Neuronitis Vestibular

***Vestibulopathy*** is a group of diseases that develop after injury or inflammation of any of the components of the vestibular and coordination apparatus, which are responsible for a person’s orientation in space.

Vestibular neuropathy is a disease of the peripheral nervous system associated with impaired innervation of the vestibular apparatus. Doctors diagnose vestibular neuropathy by using a number of medical examinations and observing the characteristic clinical picture in patients. Without timely treatment, the disease can lead to serious complications that negatively affect not only the general condition of the patient. Stroke, hypertension, atherosclerosis and other diseases - all this



Vestibular nerve disease is a condition that can result from injury or infection of the nerve endings located in the head and neck. This nerve helps balance and coordinate movements, and damage to it can cause dizziness, nausea, headaches and other unpleasant symptoms.

Symptoms of vestibular neuronitis may vary



Neurovesticular disease (synonyms: neuronitis, neuropathy) is a diagnosis used to describe damage to the vestibular nerve. The vestibular nerve supplies the rotational and horizontal angular balance system, as well as the auditory centers responsible for the balance and balance of the ears. As a result of the disease, a person experiences disturbances in the normal perception of movements and turns of the body. This may cause dizziness, unsteadiness when walking, loss of coordination, spinning sensations, and blurred vision. This article is devoted to a description of the causes and symptoms of neuronitis-vestibular disease, as well as methods of diagnosis and treatment.

Causes

The main cause of the disease is a neurodegenerative disease - Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease, brain tumor, hypoparathyroidism or brain injury.

Neuropathy is damage to nerve fibers that



Vestibulogenic neuronitis Synonyms: vestibular neuropathy

Vestibular neuronitis is a lesion of the auditory and vestibular nerves, accompanied by subjective sensations of imbalance, dizziness, unsteadiness of gait, irritability, complaints of sudden fatigue and a sharp weakening of memory at an early age. It is most difficult to combat it in childhood, especially in boys older than 2-3 years and less often in adults. It can occur as a complication of many diseases or conditions, for example, diabetes mellitus, neuroinfections, renal failure, Cushing's syndrome, hormonal imbalances in the female body, systemic lupus erythematosus and cancer. But there is also a special genetic origin. Its cause is a mutation of special genes, some of which are located on chromosome 1, and others on sex X. This is detected by genetic tests.