Jump to content

Recommended Posts

I just wanted to share this

I was diegonosed with this back in Feb this year with labyrinitis, the doctors were quick to diagnose but not very helpful in treating it. Hence I have been off work for 4 months. I took it upon myself to seek help elsewhere, I found neuroworks in Ealing who deal with labyriniitis and other neurology condititions, mainly they are chiropractors.


What a relief! I found at first consultation; vestibular damage, needed vestibular rehab, very simple exercises but very effective, no wonder I found it difficult travelling on buses and had a lot of headaches


I just wanted to share this so if anyone is suffering with is and don't want to wait months with the nhs

Here's the clinics.


I found Dr Jake Cook, who instantly diagnosed I had damage to my vestibular thingy! He's been absolutely brilliant and got me back on my feet.


Check there web site out.


http://neuroworks.co.uk/ 31 The Mall, Ealing, London, W5 2PX


http://backandneckpain.co.uk/ The Chiropractic Clinic, 157 Burlington Road, New Malden, KT3 4LU

Iam only talking personally,

but because my vestibular was damaged my eyes weren't tracking/ moving properly very juderey hence I found it difficult travelling on buses with the movement, noise. ( also when walking I was was much weaker on one side and the headaches were mainly on the opposite side) my treatment involved exercises in getting cerebral exercises: working on getting the eyes to move smoothly and balance exercises.


Also I found I was very short fused with no patience at the beginning

I have noticed I have fewer headaches which is such a relief



I hope this helps but do get medical advice as well

I've got this - or a variant of it. I went private but got fed up with the ENT treating me as guinea pig. The final straw was when he wanted to put a needle through my eardrums, after admitting that the symptoms contraindicated what the needle test was supposed to determine.
  • 1 year later...
I just found this thread as my son has very similar symptoms and is seeing the GP (for the 3rd time)today to try and determine what is causing his dizziness and nausea etc - thanks for posting. He's had it intermittently since December and it is not getting better. All blood tests and ECG proved normal. The symptoms listed on the NHS website seem to match his very closely so he will definitely ask GP to test for labyrinthitis now. Any additional feedback very welcome.

I had the Epley Manoeuvre performed on me at my local Surgery last September.

It was scary at the time with no immediate beneficial effect but within 3 days the symptoms started to fade and 2 days later they were gone and have not returned.

I would recommend anyone to try it. The relief from my dizziness and pain was amazing.

My son has just got back from the GP and has been prescribed Stemetil/ prochlorperazine for a month for dizziness after he asked the doctor if it could be labyrinthitis. The side effects of stemetil sound a bit alarming!

Have any other sufferers taken this, and did it help? Can't work out if it is likely to be a cure, or whether it just alleviates the symptoms whilst being taken.

A couple of people mentioned going privately - can you let me know who you saw?

We will also check out the other suggestions on this thread, thanks.

Yes - have taken the Stemetil. It doesn't 'cure' the underlying problem but deals with the symptoms. I suffered no side effects. I really think rest is important if the cause is suspected to be viral - as it is for many people. But the Epley Manoeuvre is really worth a try.
My partner went privately to "Harley Street Hearing" and saw Dr Palaniappan. Total of 3 appointments, 1 initial consult, 1 to perform the Epley manoeuvre, then a follow up. After a frustrating time trying to get to the bottom of it using our NHS GP, and weeks of feeling terrible, it came as a welcome relief - money well spent!

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • I highly recommend Fernando. He did an excellent job cutting down  overgrown and prickly shrubs. It was a difficult job but he was so calm and polite throughout. Fernando is delightful to have working in your garden and is an incredibly efficient gardener He was excellent at communicating prior to the job,reliable and punctual. I will use his services again in the Autumn.
    • 🤣 Yes, I can't imagine they'd thank you for that. Sounds like keeping the car is probably the right thing for you.
    • That ULEZ check is not necessarily accurate, as someone pointed out above. I did it ages ago. I don't cycle. I got a bike, had a space in a bike shelter (in fact requested one on our road), had a disastrous lesson from someone who appeared to think I was about nine years old, fell off and gave up. A refugee now has my bike and someone else has my space in the shelter thing. Our tent is too big to easily take on public transport, let alone all the other stuff. If you travel light, good for you, but my backpacking days are long gone, as are my days of happily sleeping in a tent I can't stand up in! I didn't know about this zip car point to point option. Is that to anywhere in the UK? Thanks but I did all the sums when I decided to keep the car, and the convenience for me outweighed the obviously considerable annual  cost. I don't think an Uber driver would be very happy to convey things like bags of smelly compost to my allotment 🤣 Which I can take on the bus but it's somewhat embarrassing 🤣
    • If you think about the amount you spend on keeping and using a car and how infrequently you use it, you might be better just getting the occasional Uber. We often underestimate the cost of owning a car, as opposed to using a cab. There is actually a name for it in Psychology ('the taxi meter effect'). It's likely you're spending at least £1000 - £1,500 a year on keeping a car (£500 on insurance, £200 on MOT and service / repairs, £180 on VED, Then the ULEZ fee each time you use it, plus fuel, plus depreciation... maybe minimal in this case). If you put that in a separate 'pot' and used it to cover the occasional Uber, you may find your needs more than covered. 
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...