Your doctor has just confirmed a diagnosis of Ménière's Disease for you. What’s next? Usually a course of ‘treatments.’ What kind of treatments? We recently completed our look at Lifestyle Changes, so let’s move on to Medications.
A Word of Caution
The word ‘medication’ comes from the word ‘medicine,’ which explains these definitions —
a substance used for medical treatment, especially a medicine or drug — Oxford Languages
a medicinal substance — Merriam-Webster
a medicine, or a set of medicines or drugs, used to improve a particular condition or illness — Cambridge Dictionary
Medication is medicine that is used to treat and cure illness — Collins Dictionary
the act or process of treating a person or disease with medicine — Britannica Dictionary
You may have heard the saying, “Let food be thy medicine, and let medicine be thy food.” It’s often attributed to the ancient Greek physician Hippocrates. We’ve addressed the importance of nutrition for Ménière's patients, but is there a place for modern medicine as well? Most doctors I’ve met would says ‘yes,’ but many are aware of potential dangers and are careful to explain those dangers to their patients.
Chemical medications often have side effects. Some are common side effects, some are known as uncommon, and some are rare. Check with your doctor or pharmacist, then do your own research. It’s your body, your health.
Some people may be allergic to the active or inactive ingredients in medications. Be sure to ask about what’s in the medications your doctor prescribes. If you have any concerns, discuss them with your doctor and pharmacist.
If you are taking medications for other health problems, ask your doctor about the potential for increased side effects with medications for Ménière's. The more medicines you take, the higher possibility of potentially serious side effects. Those may include increased confusion, dizziness, and risk of falling.
Another issue you may face with medications is ‘drug interactions.’ That’s where medications can interact with each other in ways that may be harmful to you. Drug interactions can also cause some medications to be less effective. Talk with your doctor and pharmacist about how medications you’re taking for other health problems may impact your Ménière's medications.
Alcohol and other substances can have negative impacts when used with some medications. Be sure to read the warnings included with your medication.
Older people often process medications differently than younger people. That includes the way your kidneys and liver work with medications. If you’re in your 60s, 70s or older, discuss those concerns with your doctors and pharmacist.
You can search for prescription medications or over-the-counter medications (OTC) online before purchasing. You can also use websites like these to check for medication side effects and drug interactions —
Drug Side Effects Checker (Drugs.com)
Daily Med Checker (DailyMed.com)
Drug Interactions Checker (Medicine.com)
Drug Interaction Checker (RxList)
Drugs Interaction Checker (WebMD)
Drug Interaction Checker (Medscape)
Now, let’s look at some of the medications your doctor may prescribe to help you deal with Ménière's.
Medications for Ménière's Disease
Here is a small amount of the information available from a variety of sources concerning medications that doctor’s prescribe for Ménière's patients —
Motion sickness medicines. Medicines such as meclizine (Antivert) or diazepam (Valium), may lessen the spinning feeling and help control nausea and vomiting.
Anti-nausea medicines. Medicines such as promethazine, might control nausea and vomiting during a vertigo attack.
Diuretics and betahistine. These medicines can be used together or alone to improve vertigo. Diuretics lower how much fluid is in the body, which may lower the amount of extra fluid in the inner ear. Betahistines ease vertigo symptoms by improving blood flow to the inner ear.
Your health care provider may prescribe a medicine to reduce fluid retention and suggest limiting your salt intake. This helps control the intensity and amount of Meniere's disease symptoms in some people. Mayo Clinic
Healthcare providers may start with treatments to reduce pressure on your inner ear from high endolymph levels. They may also prescribe medications to help with vertigo, including:
Diuretics: This medication reduces the amount of fluid in your body. Reducing fluid overall may bring down inner ear fluid levels.
Motion sickness medications: These medications help control vertigo episodes.
Antihistamines: This medication may reduce vertigo attacks
Intratympanic steroid injection: A medical provider may inject steroids through your eardrum as a means of controlling episodes of Ménière’s disease. Cleveland Clinic
Medications that are effective for Meniere's disease include:
Diuretics are the most commonly prescribed maintenance medications for Meniere's disease. Diuretics work by restricting the overproduction of fluid in the inner ear. Diuretics are long-term medications. They help reduce the number of vertigo attacks, and in some cases, they help stabilize hearing. Commonly used diuretics are Diamox (acetazolamide) and Dyazide (triamterene/HCTZ).
Meclizine (Antivert or Bonine) is the most commonly prescribed medication for the control of vertigo. Dramamine, available over-the-counter, is milder but might also be effective.
Valium in small doses may be helpful when other medications fail to control the vertigo. Mount Sinai Hospital
Your clinician may prescribe medications to use when you have an attack. These medications do not lower fluid pressure in your inner ear, but they do provide symptom relief. They include:
Antiemetics to reduce nausea and vomiting
Vestibular suppressants to reduce vertigo and anxiety associated with attacks
Medications can also help prevent and reduce the frequency of Ménière’s disease attacks. They include:
Diuretics to reduce fluid build-up in the inner ear
Migraine medications, due to the overlap of migraine and Ménière’s disease — Stanford Health Care
Ménière’s disease is also called idiopathic endolymphatic hydrops. It is a problem with the inner ear. It's one of the most common causes of dizziness that starts in the inner ear. Only one ear is usually involved, but both ears may be affected. Certain medicines can help manage the symptoms of this disease. Some help reduce fluid pressure in the inner ear. Others help ease symptoms themselves. There is no known medicine that will cure Ménière’s disease and no one medicine that is right for everyone. Discuss your options with your healthcare provider.
Fluid buildup in your inner ear often causes the symptoms of Ménière’s disease. Medicines called diuretics rid the body of excess fluid. By doing so, they may help reduce fluid buildup in the ear. Diuretics may cause your body to lose an important mineral called potassium. Because of this, you may also need to take dietary supplements.
Certain medicines can help control symptoms. They include:
Antidizziness medicines. These help relieve vertigo.
Antinausea (also called antiemetic) medicines. These help ease nausea and vomiting.
Sedatives. These help you relax and sleep during a vertigo attack.
Attacks often cause nausea and vomiting. So these medicines may be given in the form of a rectal suppository. This helps makes sure that the medicine stays in your system even if you throw up. Saint Luke’s Health System
The most commonly used maintenance medications for Ménière’s disease are diuretics, such as Diamox Sequels (acetazolamide extended-release capsules) and Dyazide (triamterene/HCTZ). These medications relieve the inner ear fluid build-up thereby reducing vertigo frequency and avoiding hearing loss progression. Acetazolamide (a carbonic anhydrase inhibitor) alkalinizes urine, encourages kidney stone formation, and increases ammonia reabsorption and hypokalemia risk. The usual counseling points of Dyazide for hypertension apply to its use in Ménière’s disease. Little evidence exists investigating similar regimens. The single double-blinded cross-over study supporting Dyazide found no impact on hearing loss, but patients expressed an unspecified preference over placebo. Loop diuretics are less favored because of their ototoxic effects.
Providers often recommend or prescribe meclizine (OTC Bonine and prescription Antivert) to control vertigo as needed. Dramamine is less effective, but patients may prefer it to Bonine. Bonine “motion sickness only” labeling and Antivert are FDA approved for vertigo. A patient may use 12.5 mg to 50 mg up to 3 times daily. The reasoning behind this labeling differences is from the possibility for serious causes of vertigo (eg, stroke or ototoxin consumption). Transient ischemic attacks can present as periodic dizziness and headache for months prior to a larger stroke. This presentation is difficult to differentiate from combined Ménière’s disease with migraine. Pharmacists should recommend provider consultation if a patient wants to use Bonine for vertigo without a prescriber’s approval.
Small doses of diazepam or lorazepam, promethazine (oral or rectal), and dexamethasone are used infrequently for treatment-resistant vertigo. Benzodiazepines are most effective for patients triggered by stress. Promethazine treats vertigo-induced nausea. The rectal suppository formulation has lower bioavailability and slower absorption than the oral syrup, so prescribers should reserve it for patients unable to take medications orally. Oral dexamethasone can reduce inner ear swelling and provide symptomatic relief. Pharmacy Times
Drug therapy can play an important role in the treatment of most Ménière’s disease patients. Betahistine is of benefit and, unlike sedative alternatives, does not interfere with the development of vestibular compensation. Diuretics can also be of benefit, although the use of acetazolamide in Ménière’s disease is still controversial. When the transition from acute to chronic treatment fails to alleviate symptoms, mild vestibular sedatives such as cinnarizine may be of help.
Where an inflammatory component is suspected in bilateral Ménière’s disease, short courses of systemic glucocorticoids may be appropriate. It recently has been shown that glucocorticoids not only influence inflammatory process in Ménière’s disease, but also alter fluid dynamics via an interaction with the sodium pumps in the semicircular canals (Ponduglula et al 2004). Intra-tympanic application of corticosteroids appears to have only temporary effects and is probably not recommended.
Anti-depressive treatment (eg, selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors) may improve the psychological handicap aspect of vertigo in pre-existing depression, but is of no benefit to vertigo itself nor in patients without pre-existing depression. Where anxiety and stress susceptibility exacerbate the condition, short courses of benzodiazepines (eg, alprazolam or serenase) can be administered, but dependence is a concern during the longer term. National Library of Medicine
Below is an overview of the medication often prescribed for vertigo. This information is not intended to replace specific medical advice from your GP, consultant, specialist or pharmacist, but to give a general description of the medication currently prescribed. You should always check with your medical professional for information and advice relating to your symptoms/condition and treatment.
Betahistine
Prochlorperazine
Cinnarizine
Cinnarizine and Dimenhydrinate
Domperidone — Menieres.org.uk
Clinically, treatment options for patients with vertigo include symptomatic, specific and prophylactic approaches. Symptomatic treatment involves controlling the acute symptoms and autonomic complaints (e.g., vertigo and vomiting). Specific treatment involves targeting the underlying cause of the vertigo (e.g., ear infection). Prophylactic treatment aims to reduce the recurrence of specific vertiginous conditions, as in Ménière’s disease, migrainous vertigo or vestibular paroxysmia.
There are six major groups of medications that can be used to treat vestibular symptoms such as vertigo and dizziness: antiemetics; anti-inflammatories, anti-Ménière’s, anti-migrainous; antidepressants and anticonvulsants. Vestibular.org
Anything New?
People with Ménière’s often ask me if I’ve heard of any new medications being tested? I have. However, many fail during clinical trials (example), so it’s good to stay on top of those trials to see what works and what doesn’t.
Here are some medications currently in various stages of clinical trials —
SPI-1005 from Sound Pharmaceuticals. The company recently “completed enrollment in its first Phase 3 clinical trial.” You can read about more about it here.
Spiral Therapeutics, Inc. is involved in an investigational clinical trial in Australia. The drug is known as SPT-2101 and is a “sustained-release steroid formulation designed for precise inner ear administration.”
Serotonin and Norepinephrine Reuptake Inhibitor (venlafaxine)
Nortriptyline-Topiramate Stepwise Regimen — UCH Clinical Trial
Continuous Ambulatory Vestibular Assessment — ClinicalTrials.gov
I’m curious, but skeptical about new treatments for Ménière’s. By using the word ‘skeptical’ as a journalist, I don’t mean that I can’t be convinced that something is true or that it works as advertised. I simply mean that I am skeptical until I see the evidence that demonstrates efficacy. As Dr. Timothy Cain wrote earlier this summer —
In general, it is best to be very skeptical about new treatments for Meniere's. Because the disease fluctuates, very large numbers are needed to prove that a treatment is effective. In other words, one can easily by chance have a sequence of patients who do well on any particular regimen, medication or device, which is actually a placebo. There are many Meniere's treatments which are probably placebos. Considerable data supporting the placebo idea has been put forth by Torok (1977) and Ruckenstein (Ruckenstein et al. 1991). There is very little evidence that any currently available treatment, whether it be medical or surgical, changes hearing. (Am J Otol 18:67-73, 1997). Dizziness-and-Balance.com
We’ll look at Medical Devices and Surgical Procedures in the next Managing Ménière's Disease newsletter.
“… rejoicing in hope, patient in tribulation, continuing steadfastly in prayer.” Romans 12:12
Here’s to hope!
How Do I Subscribe To A ‘Section’ On Substack?
If you're a new subscriber to a publication on Substack, you'll receive all sections by default.
If you're already a subscriber and the writer has created a new section or sections, you'll need to subscribe to them in order to receive a new email newsletter or see a post in your app Inbox.
Short answer, yes on plant medicine .. psychedelic medicine is still a matter of doing more research. My January article will address what some people call 'alternative' treatments, so you may find that helpful. While there are some peer-reviewed studies concerning the efficacy of psychedelic medicine for severe stress, severe PTSD, and moderate to severe major depressive disorders, the usage for Ménière's disease does not have as many studies. I will include what I find in the January article. If you need information about that before the January article, let me know.
As for the potential of 'healing' Ménière's, that is also questionable. Some people claim they've been cured of Ménière's, even though ENTs, Neurologists, and other specialists who work with Ménière's patients say the disease is incurable. I can't physically verify the claims of people I don't know personally, but I will say that everyone is unique. I know of at least ten people in my family who have now or had (prior to their death) Ménière's. Because they are family, I had the opportunity to observe or learn about their medical condition in a more personal way. One of my cousins says her ENT says she has 'Ménière's light,' meaning it's not too bad. Other members of my family have experienced a more progressive and difficult type of Ménière's. Everyone is a laboratory of one, so we do a lot of learning, experimenting, and praying.
Thanks! Mark
Hi, Neil. I reported the 'facts' as I 'know' them, not as I 'see' them. My reporting is based on decades of interviews and discussions with doctors and scientists of many different disciplines. I reported from their expertise, not mine.
As for the reader who thought my reporting was 'somewhat odd,' please ask them to contact me directly by commenting here. I will be glad to clarify any aspect of the report that concerns them. I would also want to know what parts of the report they believe are 'incorrect' based on scientific evidence they can share with me. I will gladly 'correct' anything they can prove to be incorrect. I find it odd that they would think my listing dictionary definitions of 'medicine' to be odd. Defining terms is a basic of personal and mass communication.
The quotes you shared from them are opinions, not facts. I know as a journalist that readers and viewers will have varying opinions about reports. They have a right to their opinions, even if their opinions are not based on facts. They accused me of railing against modern medicine and taking a "strong "anti-medicine" stance." That is untrue and borders on being a libelous statement. I will want to hear their proof, their factual evidence that my article was 'anti-medicine' and a railing against modern medicine. I am not now nor never have been 'anti-medicine.' I quoted from the Mayo Clinic, Cleveland Clinic, Mount Sinai Hospital, Stanford Health Care, Saint Luke’s Health System, Pharmacy Times, The National Library of Medicine, Menieres.org.uk, Vestibular.org, and ClinicalTrials.gov. Does that sound 'anti-medicine' to you? I don't think so.
You accused me, again, of not being neutral in reporting facts concerning this topic. You wrote - "the article does not succeed and is may come across as attempting to scare people away from use of medicinal treatments." Is that your opinion or are you making a truth claim? If it is your opinion, then I will simply disagree with your opinion. However, if you are making a truth claim then I will want to see your evidence that my intention in writing the article is to 'scare' people away from using medicinal treatments. I have used medicine prescribed by doctors to help in the management of my Meniere's attacks for years, so I am not anti-medicine. I also read all of the information provided by medical providers, pharmacists, and pharmaceutical companies for each medicine I use. They all include indepth 'warnings' about potential 'side effects' from using the drugs and the importance of checking into potentially bad interactions with other drugs a person is using. The first part of my article include warnings from medical providers, pharmacists, and pharmaceutical companies. Those were not my personal warnings. They came from the experts who prescribe, fill, and manufacture drugs. Why would you or any member of your FB group have a problem with that? I would expect an honest journalist to report on those types of facts.
You also repeated an earlier accusation that I used "a hackneyed pejorative used in much material that rails against modern medicine." Is that your opinion or are you making a truth claim. If truth claim, what is your evidence? It would appear that you are also accusing me of railing 'against modern medicine.' That is untrue. You made the claim, so the burden of proof is on you.
If I have misread or misunderstood your comments, please let me know so I can respond appropriately. Thanks