BPPV and spinning when you roll in bed
If you have ever rolled over in bed and the room suddenly spun, you will understand how unsettling vertigo can be.
One of the most common causes of short, position triggered spinning is benign paroxysmal positional vertigo (BPPV). Healthify describes BPPV as a common cause of vertigo related to the inner ear.
What BPPV can feel like
Common patterns include:
- Sudden spinning when rolling in bed
- Spinning when looking up or bending down
- Nausea
- Symptoms that settle, then return with the next trigger
Why assessment is important
The pattern sounds simple, but not all vertigo is BPPV. There are other inner ear causes, migraine causes, and less common neurological causes.
A targeted assessment helps confirm whether BPPV is likely and whether there are signs that suggest a different pathway is needed.
What treatment usually involves
For confirmed BPPV, clinicians often use specific repositioning manoeuvres and follow up checks. Healthify even provides tools intended for use with healthcare support, which reinforces the point that correct identification matters.
The key message
Do not self-diagnose based on one YouTube video. Get assessed, get clarity, and get the right plan.
Book now
Call 06 7574 898 or visit rehabtaranaki.co.nz.
Safety note: If vertigo is sudden, severe, or comes with stroke symptoms, call 111.