What people call “inner ear crystals” are usually tiny calcium particles in the inner ear that get displaced. The medical condition is Benign paroxysmal positional vertigo—one of the most common causes of short, intense dizziness when you move your head.
The good news: it’s often treatable with simple head-position exercises.
🌀 What’s actually happening
Inside your inner ear, there are balance organs that detect movement. When small “crystals” shift into the wrong canal, your brain gets false signals → causing:
- Spinning sensation (vertigo)
- Dizziness when turning in bed or looking up/down
- Brief but intense episodes
🧠 Most effective treatment: repositioning maneuvers
1. Epley maneuver (most commonly used)
This is the standard technique doctors recommend for BPPV.
It works by gently guiding the crystals back into place using a series of head and body positions.
👉 Typically:
- Sit → lie back with head turned → rotate head → roll body → sit up
- Each position is held for ~30–60 seconds
Many people feel improvement within 1–3 sessions.
2. Brandt-Daroff exercises (at home option)
- Repeated side-lying movements
- Less precise but helps the brain adapt over time
- Useful if symptoms persist or recur
💡 What else helps
- Move slowly when changing positions
- Sleep with head slightly elevated
- Avoid sudden head jerks during recovery
- Stay hydrated
⚠️ When to see a doctor urgently
Not all dizziness is BPPV. Get checked if you have:
- Weakness, numbness, or speech problems
- Severe headache
- Continuous dizziness (not positional)
- Hearing loss or ringing in one ear
These could suggest other conditions like inner ear infection or neurological issues.
✔️ Bottom line
Inner ear “crystals” causing vertigo are usually treatable and not dangerous, and repositioning maneuvers like the Epley maneuver are the most effective first step.
If you want, I can walk you step-by-step through the Epley maneuver for the exact side you feel vertigo on (left or right).