Video

Q&A With David Newman Toker, MD, From Johns Hopkins University Medical School: Current and Future Treatments for Dizziness and Vestibular Disorders in the Emergency Room

Author(s):

After diagnosing a patient complaining of dizziness it falls to the doctors seeing them to find the proper course of treatment. There are also efforts underway to develop new methods of treatment including modern devices that could be used in the future.

After diagnosing a patient complaining of dizziness it falls to the doctors seeing them to find the proper course of treatment. There are also efforts underway to develop new methods of treatment including modern devices that could be used in the future.

David Newman-Toker, MD from Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine discussed these new advancements during the American Academy of Neurology's annual meeting in Washington DC. Newman-Toker said that as the technology develops a select number of doctors will be able to use it now, but it could eventually become a more common tool in treating this group of patients.

Related Videos
Daniel Wang: A More Appropriate Ferritin Threshold is Cost-Effective for Iron Deficiency Screening
Kimberly A. Davidow, MD: Elucidating Risk of Autoimmune Disease in Childhood Cancer Survivors
Yehuda Handelsman, MD: Insulin Resistance in Cardiometabolic Disease and DCRM 2.0 | Image Credit: TMIOA
Nathan D. Wong, MD, PhD: Growing Role of Lp(a) in Cardiovascular Risk Assessment | Image Credit: UC Irvine
Laurence Sperling, MD: Expanding Cardiologists' Role in Obesity Management  | Image Credit: Emory University
Laurence Sperling, MD: Multidisciplinary Strategies to Combat Obesity Epidemic | Image Credit: Emory University
Schafer Boeder, MD: Role of SGLT2 Inhibitors and GLP-1s in Type 1 Diabetes | Image Credit: UC San Diego
Matthew J. Budoff, MD: Examining the Interplay of Coronary Calcium and Osteoporosis | Image Credit: Lundquist Institute
© 2024 MJH Life Sciences

All rights reserved.