Vertigo without findings

Introduction

Dizziness is a symptom that affects a large part of the population at least once in a lifetime. However, dizziness can only be a temporary phenomenon. However, it can also represent a permanent disease value and can severely restrict affected persons. The balance is controlled by our organ of equilibrium, but systems in the entire body have an influence on the sense of balance. Because of this complex interaction, it often happens that someone suffers from dizziness, but it is not possible to find a diagnosis.

Why is there dizziness without a diagnosis?

Dizziness is an extremely complex symptom that can have many different causes. Often dizziness is not caused by a specific disease. Rather, the cause lies in a complex interaction between the brain, the nerve fibers and the organ of balance.

In addition, dizziness is often also influenced by the cardiovascular system. This can also depend on the hormone levels in the blood and body as well as the electrolyte balance. Due to the complex composition of the equilibrium and the feeling of well-being without vertigo, dizziness often occurs without any concrete findings.

Not infrequently, a psychological strain or stress also plays a major role in the development of dizziness. Probably there are also many causes of vertigo that have not yet been researched and discovered. Since it is difficult to examine affected persons for unknown diseases, no diagnosis is possible in this case.

Therefore, no findings can be found in the examinations for this type of vertigo. Psychological causes often play a role in the development of vertigo. Often the psychological causes such as stress are not the sole cause of the vertigo.

For example, problems in the hormone and electrolyte balance can occur, and nerve fibres can also be damaged. Occasionally these imbalances in the body are so minor that they cannot be found in diagnostics, but the actual cause in these cases is still physical. The psyche must be given special attention, especially in the acute phase of dizziness. Whether the psyche is the trigger or whether psychological stress is the consequence of the vertigo varies greatly from person to person and from illness to illness.