Sudden episodes of spinning dizziness triggered by certain head movements may be caused by benign paroxysmal positional vertigo (BPPV), a common inner ear balance condition.
What Happens in the Inner Ear with BPPV?
The way we maintain balance when we move about is by the complex interactions of both inner ears, the eyes, the muscles down your back, and the soles of the feet, and how all of these get processed in the brain. In the inner ear, we have balance canals that detect movement, and balance organs that detect gravity. The gravity organs have tiny calcium carbonate crystals in them, which are often referred to as “rocks.”
In BPPV, a rock or two gets dislodged from the organ and falls towards the balance canals. This usually affects the posterior of the three balance canals on that side, because that’s the lowest one, and the rock follows the rules of gravity. So, when you turn your head into those certain positions, the rock pushes on the canal, and the brain thinks you are whirling around. If you stay in that position and open your eyes, within a few seconds the brain figures it out, and you stop “whirling.” But this is a scary feeling, so most people with BPPV don’t stay in that position or open their eyes.





