Patientin mit Neuritis Vestibularis

In this video, I'll tell you about a patient from my practice 👇 Her initial diagnosis was benign paroxysmal positional vertigo (BPPV). BUT ⛔ After further medical examination, it turned out to be: ➡️ Vestibular neuritis 👉 Important: For the first few days, she had typical vertigo – NOT BPPV ❗ Then the symptoms changed 👇 ➡️ Dizziness + "shaky" vision (oscillopsia) 👀 And that's exactly the point 👇 The symptoms can be extremely similar – and change over time. 👉 The most important differences: • Positional vertigo: brief attacks upon changing position • Neuritis: persistent vertigo (acute) • often followed by: swaying and oscillopsia • completely different causes This is a real example from my practice 🧠 And it shows: Not every "typical" dizziness is really what you initially think it is. ⚠️ This video is for general information purposes only and does not replace a medical diagnosis or treatment. 🎥 Animations were created under the Canva Pro license. www.therapie-kreis.at