Ménière syndrome (MS) is a peripheral vestibular disorder characterized by symptoms and signs without a defined pathogenesis. Symptoms of otogenic distress include unilateral hearing loss with tinnitus and attacks of objective vertigo. Signs include documented fluctuation (loss recovery loss) of low-frequency sensorineural (SN) hearing with greatly diminished speech recognition and eventually a unilateral loss of peripheral vestibular function ipsilateral to the hearing loss.
15 cases per 100,000
200 cases per 100,000
Pregnancy is neither protective nor preventive. The use of daily diuretics in pregnancy is not advised (Category C) unless the disorder is poorly controlled and use of the medication has provided benefit in the past.
Familial clusters have been described yet exclusion from migraine was not performed.
No definitive pathophysiology
Described by Prosper Ménière in 1861, no defined etiology has emerged1; thus, its designation as a syndrome rather than a disease. The syndrome may have several separate etiologies, with symptoms and signs merely the expression of labyrinthine distress and destruction. Leading candidates for pathogenesis include alpha-human herpesviridae infection of the temporal bone, labyrinthine trauma, and autoimmune disorders of the endolymphatic sac. Syphilis has been implicated as a possible cause. Rarely an endolymphatic sac tumor (papillotubular neoplasia) causes Ménière syndrome.
According to the 1995 guidelines4, the three major symptoms are vertigo, hearing loss, and tinnitus. Vertigo criteria include recurrent, well-defined episodes of spinning or rotation, lasting from 20 minutes to 24 hours, accompanied by nystagmus during the vertigo attacks, commonly accompanied by nausea and vomiting but no neurologic symptoms. Hearing loss criteria include audiometrically documented SN hearing deficits; must fluctuate; progress over time. Tinnitus criteria include variable, low pitched, and louder during attacks, unilateral on the affected side, subjective type (examiner cannot hear the sound). Diagnosis can be specified from possible to certain: Possible vertigo without hearing loss; or SN hearing loss, fluctuating or fixed, with disequilibrium without vertigo. Probable one definitive episode of vertigo with hearing loss on at least one occasion with tinnitus or aural fullness in the designated ear. Definite two or more episodes of vertigo with hearing loss on at least one occasion with tinnitus or aural fullness in the designated ear. Certain meeting definite specification with histopathology confirmation. Proper diagnosis requires careful exclusion of common competing etiologies, especially vestibular migraine (migraine-associated vertigo, migrainous vertigo, migraine vestibulopathy) and recurrent vestibular ganglionitis (viral labyrinthitis, vestibular neuronitis). The diagnosis of Ménière syndrome becomes more defined as the disorder progresses to produce losses of hearing and peripheral vestibular function. Early, when destruction to the labyrinth is minor, spontaneous remission is common. The simultaneous appearance of bilateral signs and symptoms with rapid deterioration in bilateral hearing loss and tinnitus strongly implicates a diagnosis of autoimmune inner ear disease rather than Ménière syndrome. Lack of hearing loss despite multiple recurrent attacks of vertigo suggests recurrent vestibular ganglionitis, unless temporally associated with migraine headache, meeting International Headache Society classification, where a diagnosis of vestibular migraine is more likely. Tumarkin's otolithic catastrophes (rare in definite Ménière syndrome) are extremely brief attacks that throw the patient downward without any loss of consciousness and without the perception of falling. Lermoyez's phenomenon is a transient recovery of hearing loss after a vertigo event.
Generally normal except during an attack; later in course may have hearing loss.
DIAGNOSTIC TESTS AND INTERPRETATION
None. Exclusionary tests for autoimmune disease and syphilis are advised prior to considering vestibular ablative treatment.
None. Both high-resolution (3T or higher) MRI of brain and internal auditory canals with or without contrast and high-resolution thin-slice CT imaging of the temporal bone are advised to exclude structural pathology.
Endolymphatic hydrops should be considered only as a histologic marker rather than a cause.
Early in the course of Ménière syndrome, when episodic vertigo may be the only symptom, many inner ear and neurologic disorders can also cause episodic vertigo, including vestibular migraine2, recurrent vestibular ganglionitis3, benign paroxysmal positional vertigo, sporadic and familial episodic ataxia, vertebrobasilar ischemic disease, eighth nerve root entry zone neurovascular compression, symptomatic ArnoldChiari malformation, hyperviscosity syndromes, endolymphatic sac tumor, brainstem neoplasia, epilepsy, and otosyphilis. Tumarkin's otolithic catastrophes can be confused with myoclonic-astatic epilepsy (rare in adults).
Betahistine: Of varying efficacy with conflicting results from multiple trials conducted worldwide. It is not a FDA-approved pharmaceutical and must be provided by a compounding pharmacy in the US. Dosing should be titrated over several days from 16 to 48 mg every 6 hours. If no effect is seen within a couple of weeks, benefit is unlikely.
Vestibular rehabilitation physical therapy is advised whenever an uncompensated peripheral vestibular loss develops or after vestibular ablative treatment.
See Complementary and Alternative Additional Therapies.
COMPLEMENTARY AND ALTERNATIVE THERAPIES
A 1,000 mg daily maximum sodium-restricted diet prior to considering vestibular ablative treatment measures. Allergy desensitization and dietary restriction from allergens in cases with comorbid allergies.
Hospital admission is advised when the course suggests alternative diagnoses, for control of autonomic symptoms, for rehydration or electrolyte repletion, or when surgical vestibular ablative treatment requires medical stabilization.
Serial audiograms document fluctuations in hearing essential to establish the diagnosis. Vertigo diaries to assess symptomatic management and determine the timing of vestibular ablative treatment. Regular office visits to monitor the effects of medical management and to assess the development of uncompensated vestibular peripheral loss.
Nutritional counseling for a low-sodium diet.
Emphasize lack of pathophysiology to confirm the cause and the absence of a cure, and provide hope that remissions are common.
Remission of varying duration is common in most cases. Atypical presentations can evolve into more typical symptoms and signs over time. Cure is not possible, and treatments do not alter the highly variable progression to varying degrees of permanent hearing loss, constant tinnitus, and peripheral vestibular loss. The disease may progress to involve both ears. Vestibular ablative treatments can achieve up to 95% cessation of vertigo events but usually result in a permanent peripheral vestibular loss and do not prevent progression of hearing loss nor resolve the tinnitus.
Hearing loss
Treatment is symptomatic, not curative, and mostly empirical. Ultimately vestibular ablative treatment measures may be needed to control the vertigo.