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Sloane Crosley

Novelist, essayist and critic Sloane Crosley has written about everything from scaling volcanoes to social foibles on the ground to her experience with Meniere’s Disease, a disorder of the inner ear that gives you vertigo and can lead to hearing loss. The writer goes into further detail about the impact it’s on her diet, the lack of a silver bullet to deal with it, and how it affects other aspects of her health.
by Sollis Health

What is Meniere’s Disease?

It’s a rare chronic inner ear disorder.

How did you find out you had it?

I was getting horrible vertigo, which is the main symptom (though tinnitus is one too, which doesn’t strike me as very fun). The first time, I was at my sister’s house for Thanksgiving and walking a dish from the kitchen to the dining room. I remember leaning on the wall of the hallway like I’d tripped. But it was just a moment and I thought: walk much? It’s never happened like that again. That was a warning shot. A few weeks later, the spinning woke me up in my sleep when I turned in the wrong direction. Things have to be pretty extreme to wake you up. Not to wake up in discomfort but from discomfort. As someone who loathes rollercoasters, this is a comically bad disease for me. Your vision blurs just the way it would be if you were spinning on a ride. The heart rate rises, too. I was diagnosed by an ENT who sent me to an audiologist. The good news? I have “Meniere’s light” (my doctor’s words) so my hearing will most likely be fine.

How does it affect your personal and professional life?

I get worried if I’m dehydrated (a triggering factor) or about drinking too much caffeine or consuming too much salt. These are things everyone should worry about. But I worry my system will keep track of it, tally it, and take its revenge. But it doesn’t affect my professional life, no. Mostly because I’m not an acrobat.

What was your experience with doctors during the Covid pandemic?

Almost none. I was lucky. Nothing really happened. I will say, the pandemic is how I learned I can’t speak to my therapist over the phone. Too much of a conversational onramp. In person, you can jump right in.

“The spinning woke me up in my sleep. Things have to be pretty extreme to wake you up. Not to wake up in discomfort but from discomfort.”

Tell us about the primary care doctor who diagnosed your sister’s Crohn’s and your dad’s lymphoma.

Dr. William Perlow. I don’t have enough room here to sing this man’s praises so I won’t try. He saved my father’s life and changed my sister’s life, forever, for the better. He retired just before the pandemic. He was a G.I. guy but I used him for primary care. Just a deeply human man who gave you the sense you were in superhuman hands without ever talking down to you.

What do you think is important for you in a primary physician?

Living in the real world. I recently broke my pinky toe by being an idiot, but somehow messed it up enough, my podiatrist scheduled me for an MRI. And I thought: really? Seems elaborate. But his view was that these appointments take a long time to schedule so I might as well book the appointment and if I don’t need it when it rolls around, great. It’s kinda pathetic how impressed I was by this, by the idea of making a patient’s life easier in general. It should be more common.

What are ways in which you provide yourself with self-care?

For the Meniere’s specifically, there’s something called the Epley maneuver, but I’m not very good at it. I also dread it because it means making the dizziness much worse before it gets better. But I also kind of respect that there’s no magic pill (except diuretics) for this. You basically have to turn your head to move some crystals around in your ear canal and then sit up straight and let them settle back into place. It has a real “here, bite on this stick” quality.

“I worry that I will hurt other things while compensating for the Meniere’s. I have definitely had more neck problems because of this. Or there are certain exercise classes that scare me.”

What are some of your anxieties about your health, and how are you allaying those?

I worry that I will hurt other things while compensating for the Meniere’s. If the mind and body know that, say, turning the head to the left is going to cause unpleasantness, it will go out of its way to not do that. Even when unconscious. I have definitely had more neck problems because of this. Or there are certain exercise classes that scare me, ones that require you to loll your head in one direction or the other on a mat. I’m not one for hanging upside-down.

How can Sollis help with MD?

People with MD can occasionally end up in the ER so I imagine having access to emergency care without the wait will be very useful. A vertigo attack — anything having to do with the head, balance or vision — is something you really can’t escape. It’s an urgent problem and genuinely upsetting, that loss of control. So having more immediate symptom relief through, say, the administration of IV fluids, would really help mentally as much as physically.

What are the conversations you are having with your family and friends about general health these days?

My parents were pretty doctor-happy when we were kids, but these days they seem calm about changes in their health. Too calm. I would like to know of surgeries and removals before they happen. My friends and I don’t really talk about health issues unless there’s a funny story attached. Perhaps this is a luxury of being in our early 40s. It’s not the first thing that comes up, it’s the sixth. In a couple of years, it will be the second. In ten years, it will probably be the first.

How do you feel about herbal and naturopathic medicine?

Oh, I fully think most of your life can be cured by what you eat and how much you sleep. I think vitamins and supplements can’t hurt (except turmeric, a lot of people can’t do that), but I wouldn’t put any eggs in that basket. I just think: bite on the stick and if that doesn’t work, yeah, go to a doctor, don’t mess around.
The views and opinions expressed in this campaign are those of the participants, and do not necessarily reflect the views of Sollis Health.
Sollis Health is a 24/7 doctor, private ER and concierge service rolled into one. Whether it’s an emergency or simply to diagnose the symptoms that you typically Google in the middle of the night, our emergency-trained doctors are ready for anything. Interested in becoming a Sollis member?

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