Can Prednisone Cause Dizziness and Tinnitus?
Yes, prednisone can cause both dizziness and tinnitus (ringing in the ears) as documented adverse effects, though these symptoms are also commonly associated with the underlying conditions for which prednisone is prescribed, making causality sometimes difficult to establish.
Direct Evidence from FDA Drug Labeling
The FDA-approved prescribing information for prednisone explicitly lists both symptoms as adverse reactions 1:
- Neurologic adverse effects include dizziness, vertigo, headache, and paresthesia 1
- Ototoxic effects documented include tinnitus, hearing loss, and deafness 1
- These effects are listed among a broad spectrum of adverse reactions that can occur with corticosteroid therapy 1
Context: Corticosteroids and Audiovestibular Symptoms
The relationship between corticosteroids and ear-related symptoms is complex because:
- Prednisone is frequently prescribed to treat conditions that themselves cause dizziness and tinnitus, including sudden sensorineural hearing loss, Ménière's disease, and vestibular neuritis 2
- The American Academy of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery recommends prednisone 1 mg/kg/day (maximum 60 mg daily) for 10-14 days as standard treatment for sudden hearing loss, which commonly presents with tinnitus and dizziness 2, 3
- Tinnitus is defined as hearing ringing, buzzing, or other noises in the ear when there is nothing causing the noise, and it varies between patients 2
Clinical Evidence from Treatment Studies
Research examining prednisone for audiovestibular conditions provides insight:
- In a study of sudden hearing loss patients treated with prednisone, recovery was associated with treatment of patients who had dizziness or tinnitus as additional symptoms, suggesting these symptoms commonly co-occur with conditions requiring steroid treatment 4
- A vestibular neuritis study using 1 mg/kg prednisone for 5 days showed that 64% of the treatment group achieved complete resolution, though dizziness symptoms were part of the underlying disease process 5
- Intratympanic steroid studies for tinnitus treatment demonstrate that tinnitus itself is the target condition, not necessarily a side effect 6
Important Clinical Considerations
Distinguishing drug effect from disease manifestation:
- When patients on prednisone report dizziness or tinnitus, clinicians must differentiate between adverse drug effects and symptoms of the underlying condition being treated 2
- The timing of symptom onset relative to drug initiation can help establish causality 1
- Most serious adverse effects of corticosteroids occur with chronic use rather than the short 10-14 day courses typically prescribed for audiovestibular conditions 2, 3
Other neurologic effects that may accompany or mimic dizziness:
- Prednisone can cause a broad range of neurologic symptoms including vertigo (distinct from dizziness), headache, emotional instability, mood swings, and cognitive impairment 1
- Cardiovascular effects such as hypertension, edema, and arrhythmias may contribute to dizziness sensations 1
- Metabolic disturbances including hypokalemia and fluid retention can manifest as dizziness 1
Risk Factors and Monitoring
Patients at higher risk for experiencing these adverse effects include those with:
- Pre-existing psychiatric conditions, as corticosteroids can aggravate these and cause neurologic symptoms 1
- Cardiovascular disease, where fluid retention and blood pressure changes may worsen dizziness 1
- Diabetes or hypertension, which require closer monitoring during even short-course steroid therapy 2, 3
The FDA labeling also documents that urticaria associated with prednisone can include dizziness as an associated symptom, along with arthralgias, life-threatening hypotension, nausea, and severe tiredness 1.