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Balance Problems: Treatment and Research Your doctor can recommend strategies to help reduce the effects of a balance disorder. Scientists are studying ways to develop new, more effective methods to treat and prevent balance disorders.
Some exercises help make up for a balance disorder by moving the head and body in certain ways. The exercises are developed especially for a patient by a professional who understands the balance system and its relationship with other systems in the body.
In benign paroxysmal positional vertigo, or BPPV, small calcium stones in the inner ear become displaced, causing a person to feel dizzy. An otolaryngologist can treat BPPV by carefully moving the head and torso to dislodge these stones.
Some antibiotics, such as gentamicin, also are used to treat Ménière's disease. Although these antibiotics can help reduce the dizziness that occurs with Ménière's disease, they can also result in permanent hearing loss. In some cases, surgery may be necessary to relieve a balance disorder.
In 1998, Senator John Glenn, who was 77 years old at the time, took part in a study sponsored by the National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders, the National Institute on Aging, and NASA on how well a person recovers balance after returning from the weightlessness of space.
Quiz 1. A balance disorder could be a sign of A. another health problem. B. not enough calcium in the diet. C. restlessness.
D. none of the above 2. One possible treatment for Ménière's disease is A. eating more salt. B. eating less salt. C. eating less fat. D. drinking more milk.
3. Antibiotics such as gentamicin, which can be used to treat Ménière's disease, can have the following side effect: A. hearing loss B. blindness C. heart problems
4. In 1998, Senator John Glenn helped conduct experiments in space to determine A. how balance disorders affect a person's mood. B. how well a person can recover from a balance disorder after the weightlessness of space. C. how balance disorders affect memory.
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