Post-Covid dizziness/off-balance, as most troubling symptom

Posted by kirstenk2003 @kirstenk2003, Mar 30, 2022

I contracted Covid in December 2021 and am currently dealing with persistent dizziness (off balance, sometimes feels like swaying, rocking, spinning, or a pull to one side). My other most bothersome symptoms are ear ringing, headaches (pressure in the head), feelings of pressure change in my ears, trouble multitasking or thinking, along with developing anxiety/ depression and some elevated heart rate and blood pressure.

Dizziness was not a symptom of my initial infection. I developed dizziness (not BPPV) around January 15th. I saw a physical therapist who determined I had Vestibular Hypofunction and I began vestibular therapy. It seemed to be working and I even returned to my office job for about 3 weeks, restricted hours. Two weeks ago I began feeling worse again. My physical therapist believes my initial issue has improved - so he doesn't know what's causing my current onset of symptoms. I started an antihistamine to combat any allergy related ear fluid, along with an anxiety medication to try and improve my blood pressure and heart rate.

I'm going to see an ENT next, and hope that I haven't waited too long to try other remedies (if there are any). Has anyone else experienced this overwhelming dizziness and had positive results with treatment or answers as to the cause? I'm scared that this is going to be how I feel forever.

Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Post-COVID Recovery & COVID-19 Support Group.

I'm long covid since March 2020
I seemed to finally be gone in May this year.

Tthen the Omicron Booster sent me into an immediate tailspin.
The first two years were characterized by fatigue, skin rasnes and occational PVC
heart palpitations and 24/7 tinnitus.

The last few months, since May, since Omicron Booster,
have been characterized by continued but now worse tinnitus,
minor fatigue (it was severe a year ago)
joint soreness
Occassional Atrial Fibrulation, which manifests itself and a dizzy spell

REPLY

I contacted Covid late 2020. I suddenly lost all my bodily functions, my husband had to get me in the car. Was treated well with remdisavir. Went through home therapy and got pretty much back to normal. I am on oxygen, yrs prior to Covid, also have had prior vertigo. I have had all vaccines. But late last year I started having balance problems. Have fallen twice (minor) falls last year on my butt. Probably fell 4 - 6 times this year, most on my buttocks. The last two were more severe. Went to pt in June for balance and it helped a lot. Except I fell big time the night of my last therapy appointment. Went to therapy again after my leg strength didn’t get better. That worked out great. Was discharged again and face planted on the bathroom floor. Had stitches in my lip, my dentist tried to stabilize my front teeth with a wire, I’ll find out in a couple more weeks if that worked any. But thankfully I didn’t break any bones. It all just reminds me of my Covid symptoms again. I have learned on my own that I cannot turn my head without being stable like most. On the ground I will go. I’m good at home, but haven’t ventured out with friends because you never know when the imbalance will strike. I had a mild stroke over 20 years ago, so I’m on blood thinners. Even had a recent MRI that only showed my previous stroke.
It’s just good to talk with people who know what you’re talking about. God bless you all. 🙏🏼

REPLY

I am surprised that Mayo has not organized a LONG COVID doctors panel to assimilate all the symptoms and the therapy's and medicines that have been proffered and the results and or failures of such.

REPLY
@dargirl

I contacted Covid late 2020. I suddenly lost all my bodily functions, my husband had to get me in the car. Was treated well with remdisavir. Went through home therapy and got pretty much back to normal. I am on oxygen, yrs prior to Covid, also have had prior vertigo. I have had all vaccines. But late last year I started having balance problems. Have fallen twice (minor) falls last year on my butt. Probably fell 4 - 6 times this year, most on my buttocks. The last two were more severe. Went to pt in June for balance and it helped a lot. Except I fell big time the night of my last therapy appointment. Went to therapy again after my leg strength didn’t get better. That worked out great. Was discharged again and face planted on the bathroom floor. Had stitches in my lip, my dentist tried to stabilize my front teeth with a wire, I’ll find out in a couple more weeks if that worked any. But thankfully I didn’t break any bones. It all just reminds me of my Covid symptoms again. I have learned on my own that I cannot turn my head without being stable like most. On the ground I will go. I’m good at home, but haven’t ventured out with friends because you never know when the imbalance will strike. I had a mild stroke over 20 years ago, so I’m on blood thinners. Even had a recent MRI that only showed my previous stroke.
It’s just good to talk with people who know what you’re talking about. God bless you all. 🙏🏼

Jump to this post

I am going through long covid treatment. They are finding some people with weak lower extremities have a collapsed artery in the pelvic area that requires surgery. I had a special mri (mrv) done to determine if I had this issue.

REPLY

Thank you so much for that information. I’ll keep it in mind. How are you doing now?

REPLY

I found relief using a low dose nicotine patch (3.5 which is half of a 7 mg patch), as well as supplementing with 50 mg of sublingual glutathione and increasing my Vit C intake. Strange as it sounds, within 30 minutes of applying the first patch, my head/ears actually opened up clearer than they had been in months! I have continued this for a month, and have seen 75-80% improvement in my LC symptoms (off balance, anxiety, brain fog, fatigue, shortness of breath) I joined 2 social media groups on FB 1) Renegade Research #TheNicotineTest. 2) Long Haul Reset: Long Covid & Spike Injury Treatment. There is an overload of information in these groups that seems overwhelming at times, but the information has been helpful to me.

REPLY
@artistandtwin

Oh, my goodness, can I ever relate to this! After being really sick with covid & unable to keep even vitamins or anti-nausea meds down for 2 weeks (I was able to drink water & juice), I was extremely fatigued, dizzy, and shaky. Then, 1 month after covid had hit, I woke up in the middle of the night with room-spinning vertigo. It was not episodic. It was a constant, 24/7 spinning in my head for 5 straight months. I had nystagmus (eyes bouncing side to side like I'd just gotten off a merry-go-round) for a good 10 minutes that morning. I could barely walk down the hall. For most of those 5 months, I had to hang onto the walls as I walked anywhere. My legs were uncoordinated. I walked with a wide-based, slow, ataxic gait like I was 90 yrs old but I was in my middle 50s.

I saw a dr., tried BPPV exercises at home which did nothing. Then I saw a P.T. for vestibular P.T. Not sure that helped. By my 3rd visit, my PT & I both knew I needed to see an ENT. When I FINALLY got to see an ENT (2.5 mos after the onset of my 24/7 vertigo), he told me there was no medicine he could give me, that I needed balance testing (YA THINK?!), an MRI, & to see a neurologist. I had times at work (yes, I forced myself to work even though I could barely walk or stand) when I couldn't make my feet move. I knew there was something wrong with my BRAIN and it was more that long-haul covid "brain fog"! I thought the MRI would show a brain tumor for sure.

I suffered from excruciating headaches in the back of my head, red eyes, hand tremors so bad I couldn't hold a spoon without dropping it, vertigo so bad that I couldn't touch my nose with my finger, extreme tingling in my legs, and the debilitating fatigue that made it hard to stand up, my less lift my arms to take a pan out of the cupboard. This went on for over a yr.

It's been 20 months since the vertigo began and I JUST found out what's been causing it!

n the end, after seeing all kinds of specialists & having all kinds of tests, here is what was wrong with me.

1. I had low ferritin, which means my iron stores were low. So I began taking iron every other day as low ferritin causes "all sorts of neurological symptoms". The iron helped my vertigo become episodic and not constant. BUT it was NOT BPPV.

2. All 3 of my brain MRIs (over a period of 5 mos) showed "moderate mucosal thickening" in the sphenoid and ethmoid sinuses (deep in the skull behind your eyes & nose) and mucous retention cysts. Everybody kept focusing on a very tiny stroke I'd apparently had during all this, but everyone also said this stroke wouldn't have caused any symptoms. Guess what? The sinuses were the problem all along and my ENT missed it!

My 3rd neurologist is the one who explained my sphenoid sinus issues were so bad, so extreme, they were putting pressure on my cerebellum & brainstem and THAT'S why I was suffering with 24/7 & later episodic vertigo, tingling in my legs, incoordination of my legs, inability to move my feet on occasion, hand tremors, & headaches! It took me 20 months to find this out!

In the meantime, my biggest blessing was that I'd seen an immunologist/ allergist and he'd had me start some sinus meds that have really helped. I didn't know why they were helping so much, but now I do. Every day I use NeilMed sinus rinse, azelistine Rx Nasal spray (2×/day), fluticasone Nasal spray, cetirizine OTC allergy pill, montelukast Rx pill, and now he's also having me start prednidone eye drops in my nose 2x/day. Plus, I use Benzedrex inhaler as needed and my PCP had me try dramamine/anti-vert (meclizine) but I don't think it helped.

So, now I'm waiting to see a new ENT ... one who will recognize what all the MRIs showed & what all the MRI reports clearly listed about my sphenoid sinus issues & cysts. I may need a sphenoidotomy (sinus surgery). I can't BELIEVE it took THIS LONG for someone to figure out what was going on with me, but I pushed & pushed until I found someone who figured it out.

Apparently, I've had sinus infections I didn't know about and quite possibly this is why I had so many random fevers and infections (at least 4 or 5 within 12 mos after having covid).

And sphenoid sinus infections only happen 1-3% of the time ppl have sinus infections. Usually, sinus infections are in the front of the face. That's why nobody was figuring this out I guess.

Plus, sphenoid sinus disease doesn't usually put pressure on the cerebellum & brain stem like mine did, so everyone thought this was a benign finding on my MRIs.

Good grief, this has been a long haul. I'm doing better but still suffer with vertigo each time I move my head, in dim or bright lights, in certain stores, in visually stimulating environments, etc. Hopefully, I'm a candidate for sinus surgery and hopefully this was helpful to you.

Jump to this post

@artistandtwin I suspect that I have the same issue. How are you now? Were you able to get surgery?

REPLY

I have had loss of walking since Dec. 2019 and have tried everything I could think of and everything recommended on this site with the exception of some of the crazy, untested drugs that have been listed. I found no relief. I have been going to balance therapy for months with limited success, but what I have found that helps is my therapist (I have a great one) recommended changing my walking mechanics. I now take longer strides, keep my feet closer together and don't shuffle when I walk. I find my balance to be somewhat better and my walking has improved. It is not a great solution to the problem, but it has helped.

REPLY
@colleenyoung

Hi @auntb65, I'm sorry to hear that you, like others, are still dealing with post-COVID issues, most notably dizziness. @kirstenk2003 @welchllb @rinadbq @mkportzen and @teachols can relate. @ginalambiris mentions ear problems after seeing an ENT that help resolve some of her issues.

@pinkcalla127, that must be a very odd sensation to feel like you're walking on ice skates. Is this also accompanied with an off-balance feeling or dizziness?

@coopm0m can you tell us more about the eye exercises that helped you?

I wonder if anyone has discussion proprioception with their PT? Proprioception also called kinesthesia, is the body’s ability to sense its location, movements, and actions. It’s the reason we’re able to move freely without consciously thinking about our environment. Injuries or medical conditions that affect the muscles, nerves, and the brain can cause proprioception impairment. Relatively simple balance and proprioception exercises can help.

Has anyone tried proprioception exercises? Do they help you?

Jump to this post

I have been doing Pt 3x a week for a year. I had COVID in 8/22 with several weeks in the hospital. My initial symptoms were high fevers, severe balance and proprioception issues along with dizziness, cognitive challenges, and movement sensitivity. There have been a lot of tests run, and most show some helpful explanations but not definitively so. I did have some balance problems pre-COVID but they were acute and severe post COVID. The proprioceptive and vestibular teams have worked hard with me and I do every homework assigned. After a year, I am out of a bed, then moved to a wheelchair, then came the walker and rollator, to two canes. I am thrilled that my progress is still happening and hopeful that my next scans are all good. Some spinal issues that pre-existed COVID may have made me more susceptible but they do not explain the scute nature of the proprioceptive loss that was immediate post-COVID.
This is being written as encouragement for others. It's been a struggle but I see the light at the end of the tunnel!!!!!

REPLY

Omg! I am feeling the exact same thing!! I hope you are better. At the same time it calms me to know someone else is going through the same thing I am. I have been using drops to dry my inner ear but it has not gone out completely.

REPLY
Please sign in or register to post a reply.