Canalith Repositioning Procedure – BPPV Maneuvers is a patient-friendly glossary entry reviewed for vertigo and ENT education.

Canalith repositioning procedure is the general name for maneuvers that move loose BPPV crystals out of a semicircular canal.

What canalith repositioning procedure means

Canalith repositioning procedure is the general name for maneuvers that move loose BPPV crystals out of a semicircular canal. The term matters because patients often use one word, dizziness, for several different body sensations.

A clear definition helps decide whether the likely problem is inner-ear vertigo, blood pressure, migraine, medicine effect, anxiety-related dizziness, neck-related dizziness or a neurological warning sign.

Why it matters

Epley, Semont and BBQ roll are examples, but the correct maneuver depends on the canal involved. This is why the symptom story, timing, triggers, hearing symptoms, eye movements and balance examination are all important.

For medical SEO and patient safety, this glossary page should guide the reader toward the right canonical guide rather than replacing a diagnosis.

How I use it in clinic

In clinic, I choose the maneuver after positional testing because using the wrong maneuver can prolong symptoms. I also check for red flags such as new weakness, double vision, slurred speech, severe headache, fainting, chest pain, new hearing loss or inability to walk.

That clinical filter prevents two common mistakes: treating every dizzy spell as BPPV, or treating every patient only with tablets without finding the cause.

What patients should do next

These maneuvers are not neck exercises; they are canal-specific treatments for a confirmed BPPV pattern. If symptoms are atypical, prolonged or linked with neurological signs, diagnosis should come before home maneuvers.

Before a consultation, note the first day of symptoms, attack duration, triggers, ear symptoms, headache history, neck problems, falls, medicines and any previous test reports.

This page is for patient education only and does not replace examination by a qualified doctor.