My wife doesn’t have rocks in her head

Dec 01 2005

Go figure.

Lately, she’s been feeling kind of dizzy in the morning, sort of a vertigo thing. We went to an ENT specialist today and the doctor did a Dix Hallpike Test on her to check for benign positional vertigo. Sounds bad, doesn’t it? Turns out that this is not the problem. On to the next test, an MRI or something.

Benign positional vertigo is the most common cause of vertigo. It is caused by a disturbance within the balance organs of the inner ear. The inner ear has tiny stones that move as you change position, allowing your brain to interpret your body’s position and maintain your balance. In benign positional vertigo, these stones break off and float free within the semicircular canals of the inner ear. This may happen in one ear more than another, sending the brain confusing messages about your body’s position. The result is vertigo.

dix hallpike.jpg
It was pretty freaky watching it, actually. Looked kind of like a faith healing.

Well, anyway, I don’t know if I am happy or disappointed, but it has now been medically proven that my wife’s problem has nothing to do with rocks in her head.

She’ll probably make me remove this post when she sees it. (Don’t tell her, ok?)

 
3 Comments

Posted by Steve at 8:42 pm

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  1. Nelly

    December 1, 2005 at 11:17 pm

    Too late! She told me to come see what you wrote…now she’ll tell you to remove it. LOL

    Btw, some doctors! I could have told her/you the same thing without looking at pictures of her brain! Once again, I missed my calling. Geez! ;0)

     
  2. Geri

    December 2, 2005 at 10:45 am

    Have you yelled at her lately? That’ll cure it. I volunteer! Or maybe asking her how’s she doing every 15 minutes.

     
  3. Pender

    December 2, 2005 at 2:38 pm

    They bounced her head off the ground in the name of jebus.