Ent specialist auraiya is something I see regularly in my practice. If you’re looking for a vertigo specialist or ENT doctor near Auraiya, you’ve likely tried local hospitals first. I understand—you want convenience. But here’s what I see regularly: patients from Auraiya and surrounding areas spend months going in circles with general ENT doctors who have limited expertise in vestibular disorders. They miss the diagnosis. Or worse, they get told their vertigo is psychological and nothing can be done.
Table of Contents: Ent Specialist Auraiya
- Why Patients From Auraiya Travel to Prime ENT Center
- What Services We Offer to Auraiya Patients
- Common ENT and Vertigo Problems I See From Auraiya Patients
- How to Reach Prime ENT Center From Auraiya
- What to Expect on Your First Visit
- Online Consultation for Auraiya Patients
- FAQ: Auraiya Patients Ask
I’m Dr. Prateek Porwal. For the past 13 years, I’ve specialized in exactly this—vertigo, BPPV, and balance disorders. My clinic is in Hardoi, which is only 55 kilometers from Auraiya—about 1.5 hours by car. And I’ve found that Auraiya patients often need specialized care that simply isn’t available locally.
Why Patients From Auraiya Travel to Prime ENT Center
The simple answer: specialized vertigo diagnosis and treatment. Here’s what’s different.
First, equipment. We have VNG (Videonystagmography) and stabilometry systems. These aren’t common in small city hospitals. VNG shows exactly how your eyes move and where the problem is in your vestibular system. Without it, doctors are essentially guessing. I’ve had patients from Auraiya who were misdiagnosed for years.
Second, the Bangalore Maneuver. I developed this technique specifically for anterior canal BPPV—a variant that most ENT doctors don’t see often enough to recognize. Epley maneuver works for posterior canal. Mine works where others fail. It’s published in peer-reviewed journals. Patients from Auraiya often tell me: “My doctor in the city tried the standard maneuver. It didn’t work. But this—this worked on the first visit.”
Third, I see this every single day. Not as a side specialty. This is what I do. Your Auraiya general ENT doctor might see three vertigo patients a month. I see three a day. That experience matters when you’re standing in my clinic dizzy and disoriented.
What Services We Offer to Auraiya Patients
BPPV Diagnosis and Treatment
BPPV—Benign Paroxysmal Positional Vertigo—is the most common cause of vertigo. It’s completely treatable. But it needs proper diagnosis. I use Dix-Hallpike testing along with VNG imaging to confirm which canal is affected (anterior, posterior, or lateral). Then I apply the right maneuver. For posterior canal (80% of cases), Epley works. For anterior canal, I use the Bangalore Maneuver. For lateral canal, I use Lempert roll. Results: 70–80% of patients resolve in 1–2 visits. No medications, no surgery.
VNG and Balance Testing
These tests are the foundation of accurate diagnosis. VNG captures involuntary eye movements triggered by specific head positions. Stabilometry measures your standing balance. Together, they tell me exactly what’s wrong and where. Most Auraiya hospitals don’t have this equipment. They can’t offer what I can.
Vestibular Rehabilitation Therapy (VRT)
Some patients need exercise-based rehab. After diagnosis, I work with patients on specific head movements, gaze exercises, and balance training. This is especially important for vestibular neuritis or chronic imbalance. I can guide you through the first session in-person, then continue via video calls if needed.

Hearing and Tinnitus Assessment
Vertigo often comes with hearing loss or tinnitus. I perform audiometry and tympanometry to assess your inner ear thoroughly. Some patients discover hearing aids help more than they expected.
Diagnostic Imaging Coordination
If I suspect something beyond peripheral vestibular disorder—like central causes, stroke, or tumor—I’ll recommend MRI or CT and interpret findings from a vestibular perspective. Auraiya hospitals can do the scan. I’ll make sure it’s the right scan and read it correctly.
Common ENT and Vertigo Problems I See From Auraiya Patients
The Auraiya region has unique health patterns. I’ve noticed:
Noise-Induced Hearing Loss
The agriculture, some mining operations industry generates significant occupational noise. Workers often develop hearing loss and sometimes tinnitus. Many don’t realize it’s preventable—proper hearing protection would help. I see this frequently and can advise on both current hearing aids and future prevention.
Age-Related Balance Disorders
Rural and semi-urban areas like Auraiya have older populations with less access to specialist care. Dizziness in elderly Auraiya residents often gets written off as “old age.” Not true. Vestibular exercises, medication adjustments, and safety measures can dramatically improve quality of life. I’ve treated 60+ and 70+ year-old patients from Auraiya who regained confidence and independence.
This also applies to seniors and older adults who may face similar symptoms.
Environmental Dust and Sinus Issues
coal mining region edge, agricultural area, industrial access. This exposure affects hearing over time and can trigger sinus infections leading to secondary vertigo. I work closely with patients on managing these underlying causes.
Pollution-Related ENT Problems
The air quality near Auraiya town center, mining areas nearby and surrounding areas affects throat, nasal, and ear health. Some Auraiya patients develop chronic sinusitis or Eustachian tube dysfunction, which can worsen vertigo symptoms. Treating the sinus problem often improves the vertigo.
How to Reach Prime ENT Center From Auraiya
Let me be practical about logistics.
Driving
From Auraiya to Hardoi: 55 km, 1.5 hours drive. The route is straightforward—mostly NH or state highways. I recommend morning appointments so you’re not navigating evening traffic on the return trip. Bring someone who can drive if you’re actively dizzy.
Public Transport
Buses run from Auraiya to Hardoi regularly (check local schedules). Train travel is also an option if you’re on the railway network. Once you reach Hardoi, a short auto-rickshaw ride gets you to our clinic.
Parking and Accessibility
Our clinic has parking. No need to stress about finding a spot when you’re dizzy. We’re set up for patients with mobility issues—ramps, handrails, nearby washrooms.
What to Expect on Your First Visit
You’ll arrive. A team member will ask your chief complaint: when did the dizziness start, what makes it worse, any hearing loss, any trauma to your head. I’ll review your history and any prior tests you’ve had.
Then the clinical exam. I’ll check your eyes, your head position responses (Dix-Hallpike, Roll tests), your balance, and your coordination. No pain involved. Might be mildly uncomfortable if I trigger vertigo briefly—but that’s diagnostic, and it passes in seconds.
Based on the exam, I’ll recommend testing. VNG takes about 15 minutes. Stabilometry adds another 10. By the end of your visit, we usually have a diagnosis and a clear treatment plan. Sometimes that plan starts the same day (like an Epley maneuver). Sometimes it’s follow-up appointments or a referral for imaging.
The goal: you leave knowing exactly what you have, why you have it, and what we’re going to do about it. No vagueness. No “it might be stress.”
Online Consultation for Auraiya Patients
Can’t visit yet? We offer video consultations. I can’t do maneuvers or testing online, but I can review your history, look at prior test results you have, and give you initial advice. Many Auraiya patients start this way, then come in for the full workup after they understand what’s happening.
Related reading:
- Dr Prateek Porwal at NESCON 2022, AIIMS Delhi
- Can Vestibular Neuritis Come Back? Recurrence and What to Wa
- Diagnosis of Vertigo
FAQ: Auraiya Patients Ask
Q: How long does the drive from Auraiya take? Can I return the same day?
A: 1.5 hours each way, so about 1.5 hours return. Most Auraiya patients book morning appointments and drive back after testing and initial treatment. If we need a maneuver, you’ll rest 15–20 minutes afterward before driving. Safer than driving immediately. Some prefer staying overnight in Hardoi.
Q: Do you have experience treating patients from Auraiya?
A: Yes. I’ve treated hundreds of patients from Auraiya and surrounding areas. The health patterns are similar across the region—occupational noise exposure, pollution effects, aging population issues. The conditions are the same. What differs is access to specialized diagnosis and treatment, which is why they come to us.
Q: Will local Auraiya hospitals refer to you?
A: Some will, some won’t. Many general ENT doctors are uncomfortable admitting their limitations. But here’s the reality—if your Auraiya doctor has suggested your vertigo is psychological or untreatable, or if standard Epley maneuvers haven’t worked, that’s a sign you need a specialist. Come directly. Bring any prior test reports so I can compare.
Q: What if I need imaging or additional workup?
A: I’ll recommend it if needed. You can get MRI or CT done in Auraiya after our consultation. We’ll coordinate to make sure it’s the right scan. Then I’ll interpret it with the vestibular findings I’ve already collected. No need to travel for every imaging center in the country—I just need the images and reports.
Q: Are there any medications or treatments I can start before my first appointment?
A: Not yet. I want to avoid masking symptoms before diagnosis. If you’re extremely dizzy and can’t function, your Auraiya doctor can give short-term symptomatic relief (like Betahistine or Cinnarizine). But come see us soon after for definitive diagnosis. Don’t wait weeks on medications—that’s the wrong approach.
Q: What if the diagnosis turns out to be something serious, like a stroke or tumor?
A: That’s about 5% of dizziness cases. My testing will identify red flags. If I suspect anything serious, imaging happens immediately, and you’ll likely need neurology or neurosurgery consultation. That’s rare, but it’s why proper diagnosis matters. Better to catch it than assume it’s simple BPPV.
If you’re from Auraiya or nearby Uttar Pradesh, and you’re tired of uncertainty around your vertigo or balance problems, reach out. I’ve helped hundreds of patients from your region. You deserve specialist-level care, and it’s closer than you think.
Dr. Prateek Porwal
ENT & Vertigo Specialist
Prime ENT Center, Hardoi
Over 13 years of experience in vestibular disorders

Reference: Persistent Postural-Perceptual Dizziness — Staab et al, 2017
This article is for educational purposes only. Please consult Dr. Prateek Porwal at Prime ENT Center, Hardoi or book an online consultation at 7393062200. Website: drprateekporwal.com