 |
 |

Prosper Ménière and His Disease
Robert W. Baloh, MD
Arch Neurol. 2001;58:1151-1156.
In 1861, Prosper Ménière presented a paper before the
French Academy of Medicine in which he described a series of patients with
episodic vertigo and hearing loss. He also mentioned the postmortem examination
of a young girl who experienced vertigo after a hemorrhage into the inner
ear. Prior to that time, vertigo was thought to be a cerebral symptom similar
to epileptic seizures. Ménière pointed out that vertigo frequently
had a benign course and that common treatments, such as bleeding, often did
more harm than good. He was not attempting to define a disease or syndrome
but rather to emphasize that vertigo could originate from damage to the inner
ear. Confusion regarding the clinical and pathologic features of Ménière
disease persisted well into the 20th century.
From the Department of Neurology and Division of Head and Neck Surgery,
University of California School of Medicine, Los Angeles.
Corresponding author and reprints: Robert W. Baloh, MD, UCLA Department
of Neurology, Box 951769, Los Angeles, CA 90095-1769 (e-mail: rwbaloh{at}ucla.edu).
|