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Why Treating Vertigo Anxiety Like “Just Anxiety” Keeps People Stuck

Why Treating Vertigo Anxiety Like “Just Anxiety” Keeps People Stuck

Published 2 weeks, 2 days ago
Description

What if your vertigo anxiety isn’t “just anxiety” — but your brain and body reacting to feeling deeply unsafe and unsteady?

In this episode of Migraine Heroes Podcast, host Diane Ducarme explores the complex relationship between vertigo, dizziness, and anxiety. When the world feels like it’s spinning, your nervous system naturally shifts into survival mode. But too often, people are told to simply “calm down” without addressing what may actually be happening inside the brain and body.

Blending neuroscience with a compassionate, holistic perspective, this episode helps you understand why the cycle of vertigo and anxiety can become so difficult to break — and what true regulation may really require.

You’ll discover:

💡 Why vertigo and dizziness can trigger powerful neurological fear responses that feel impossible to “think away”

💡 How to tell the difference between anxiety creating symptoms versus symptoms creating anxiety

💡 What your nervous system may truly need to feel grounded, safe, and steady again

This episode is a reminder that your symptoms are not “all in your head.” Sometimes, anxiety is not the root cause — but the consequence of a body and brain struggling to regain balance.

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References:

  • The Epidemiology of Dizziness and Vertigo (Neuhauser, 2016): This chapter reviews the prevalence and population burden of dizziness and vertigo disorders worldwide. Read more here.
  • Chronic Subjective Dizziness and PPPD (Staab, 2012): This review explains chronic subjective dizziness and the evolution toward Persistent Postural-Perceptual Dizziness (PPPD), emphasizing visual dependence, anxiety, and altered vestibular processing. Read more here.
  • Diagnostic Criteria for Persistent Postural-Perceptual Dizziness (Staab et al., 2017): This consensus paper establishes the official diagnostic criteria for PPPD within the International Classification of Vestibular Disorders. Read more here.
  • Vestibular Migraine (Beh, 2019): This review is specifically titled Vestibular Migraine: How to Sort it Out and What to Do About it and covers diagnosis, symptoms, and management. Read more here.
  • Vestibular Dysfunction and Anxiety (Jacob, Furman & Balaban, 2001): This paper directly covers the interface between vestibular dysfunction and anxiety, replacing the weak Continuum citation. Read more here.
  • Multisensory Integration in Balance Control (Bronstein, 2016): This chapter directly matches the topic of multisensory integration in balance control across vestibular, visual, and proprioceptive systems. Read more here.
  • Central Vestibular Disorders (Brandt & Dieterich, 2017): This review focuses on central vestibular disorders and bilateral vestibular circuitry, which is a cleaner match than the earlier incorrect Brain citation. Read more here.

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