I occasionally get it. It tends to occur after I have had a cold or ear infection. I didn't realise what it was at first. I just fealt a bit queasy and found I was misjudging doorways, and kept bumping into things because I wasn't walking staight, without realising it. It must have looked like I was a bit drunk. Some people suffer much worse. I believe it is caused by inflammation in the inner ear, where the balance centre is. I found the best treatment (for me) was an anti sea-sickness tablet, not those that combat nausea, but those designed to act on the inner ear (I think it was Stematil, but not sure). Also what helped was taking medication specifically targeting the estation tubes in my ears, if these don't drain properly, it causes inflammation in the general area. I haven't had an "attack" for a number of years now.
General advice only, this worked well for me.
Hope this helps.
2006-10-12 11:28:00
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answer #1
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answered by Labsci 7
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Why would any other terrorist need to attack the U.S.? Bush is the ultimate terrorist and he's been attacking the U.S. constantly since 9/11, and much more effectively than Osama ever could have dreamed of doing himself. To answer the question. America will almost certainly be attacked by terrorists after Bush is gone, but it will have nothing to do with the fact that Bush is gone. The sun won't rise and set because he's gone either. It just will because that's what it does.
2016-03-28 06:50:08
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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hi there
my sister suffers from it and i believe it is a disease of the middle ear. the first attack she got was about 8 years ago and she was doing the ironing and she felt faint and then the room started to "spin around". it was very very scarey for her cos it was the first attack she ever had and didnt know what was happening. i would say she has about 2 - 3 a year. she still gets frightened but not as much as when she first got it.
2006-10-12 10:58:50
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answer #3
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answered by shariwharton 4
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