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vertigo

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debri | 19:31 Tue 25th Dec 2007 | Travel
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i have vertigo has anybody been up in a plane with vertigo and how does it affect you
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hi yes I've got vertigo (had it for 5 years) when flying i find that I have more problems than otherwise and am waiting to be rerefered to discuss this with a consultant. Are you affected?
vertigo's dizziness rather than fear of heights, so it mightn't affect you flying
jno's right. It's very different. I suffer with vertigo and cannot stand on bridges/at the end of piers etc. because I feel as though I cannot keep my balance.

I don't like flying but the fear I suffer with vertigo isn't there - its' simply because i can't understand how planes can stay in the air!
Scooby - Aeroplanes fly because an 18th Century mathematician called Daniel Bernoulli discovered that the faster a fluid flows, the less pressure it exerts. I don't know if this assuages your fear or not!
I also suffer with vertigo and have to avoid escalators, glass sided lifts etc. However, I've never had a problem on a plane and I've been to New Zealand two years running.
Lol.....thanks. It's more of a problem with my brain accepting anything anyone's ever explained to me. It doesn't function properly up there!
Vertigo is not a fear of heights - acrophobia is. you may find flying causes further problems but speak to your GP if you take medication for vertigo - or are you just afraid of heights?

Vertigo is an inner ear condition that causes dizziness and has other symptoms.

Vertigo is often misnamed as a fear of heights because the acrophobic has dizziness as a symptom of his fear

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