Dizziness in Lyme Disease
Lyme Science Blog
Mar 30

Dizziness in Lyme Disease: Why It Happens

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Dizziness in Lyme Disease: Why It Happens

Quick Answer: Dizziness in Lyme disease may reflect autonomic dysfunction, neuroinflammation, vestibular involvement, or poor regulation of circulation. Patients may feel lightheaded, off balance, faint, or mentally disconnected—especially when standing, walking, or overexerting.

Dizziness in Lyme disease is a common but often misunderstood symptom and part of the broader spectrum of Lyme disease symptoms. Some patients describe lightheadedness. Others report imbalance, internal swaying, a floating feeling, or near-fainting episodes. In many cases, the problem is not a simple inner ear disorder or anxiety alone—it may reflect broader neurologic or autonomic dysfunction.

These symptoms often overlap with autonomic dysfunction in Lyme disease, where impaired regulation of heart rate, blood pressure, and circulation can lead to dizziness, palpitations, and fatigue.

Dizziness may also occur alongside fatigue, brain fog, and anxiety-like symptoms, making it easy to misinterpret when symptoms are viewed separately rather than as part of a multisystem pattern.


What Does Dizziness in Lyme Disease Feel Like?

Patients describe dizziness in several different ways, including:

  • Lightheadedness when standing
  • A floating or disconnected feeling
  • Loss of balance or unsteadiness
  • Internal swaying or rocking
  • Near-fainting episodes
  • Weakness or shakiness after exertion

Some patients do not experience classic spinning vertigo. Instead, they feel unstable, foggy, weak, or physically off balance in a way that is difficult to describe.

When dizziness worsens with standing, walking, heat, exertion, or stress, the symptom may reflect a broader autonomic or neurologic pattern rather than an isolated ear problem.

Dizziness in Lyme disease is often circulatory or neurologic—not just inner ear or anxiety related.


When Dizziness May Be Part of Lyme Disease

Dizziness may be part of Lyme disease when it occurs alongside other symptoms such as fatigue, brain fog, palpitations, exercise intolerance, or neurologic changes. When these symptoms appear together, they may reflect a broader multisystem illness rather than a single isolated problem.

Dizziness is often misattributed to anxiety, dehydration, or inner ear disorders, which can delay recognition of Lyme disease and contribute to Lyme disease misdiagnosis.

Because early Lyme disease tests may be negative, symptoms like dizziness may be overlooked when laboratory results are interpreted without considering timing and clinical context.


Why Lyme Disease Can Cause Dizziness

Several biologic mechanisms may contribute to dizziness in Lyme disease:

  • Autonomic dysfunction: poor regulation of heart rate, blood pressure, and circulation
  • Neuroinflammation: inflammation affecting the brain and nervous system
  • Vestibular involvement: disruption of balance pathways
  • Exertional intolerance: worsening symptoms after standing, walking, or activity

These symptoms may be part of broader persistent Lyme disease mechanisms, especially when they occur with fatigue, cognitive symptoms, or palpitations.

For general background, see:


Dizziness, Standing, and POTS-Like Symptoms

Dizziness that worsens when standing may reflect autonomic dysfunction or POTS-like physiology. Patients may notice lightheadedness, rapid heart rate, shakiness, or worsening fatigue after standing for even short periods.

This pattern is commonly linked to autonomic dysfunction in Lyme disease, where the nervous system has difficulty regulating circulation properly.

In some patients, this pattern overlaps with POTS in Lyme disease.


Dizziness vs Anxiety

Dizziness in Lyme disease is often mistaken for anxiety, especially when it occurs with palpitations, internal trembling, or a sense of panic. However, several features may suggest a physiologic rather than primary psychiatric cause:

  • Symptoms worsen with standing rather than stressful thoughts
  • Lightheadedness occurs with fatigue or weakness
  • There are coexisting neurologic or autonomic symptoms
  • The episodes feel physical first and emotional second

In some patients, what appears to be anxiety may actually reflect autonomic instability or panic attack without anxiety.


Related Causes of Dizziness in Lyme Disease

Dizziness in Lyme disease can have multiple overlapping causes. In some patients, more specific patterns may be identified:

Identifying these patterns can help guide evaluation when dizziness does not fit a single explanation.


How Dizziness Affects Daily Life

Dizziness can interfere with work, exercise, driving, and daily routine. Patients may avoid standing in lines, walking long distances, or leaving home alone because symptoms feel unpredictable or destabilizing.

Recognizing dizziness as part of a broader Lyme/autonomic picture can help guide more appropriate evaluation.


Related Symptom Patterns


Clinical Takeaways

Common but underrecognized: Dizziness is a frequent symptom in Lyme disease.

Biologic basis: Symptoms may reflect autonomic dysfunction, neuroinflammation, vestibular involvement, or exertional intolerance.

Pattern matters: Dizziness that occurs with fatigue, palpitations, brain fog, or standing intolerance suggests a broader systemic process.

Next steps: When dizziness occurs alongside fatigue, brain fog, palpitations, or standing intolerance, a broader evaluation may be needed. Lyme disease and associated conditions should be considered when symptoms follow a multisystem pattern rather than a single isolated cause.


Frequently Asked Questions

Can Lyme disease cause dizziness?
Yes. Lyme disease can cause dizziness through autonomic dysfunction, neuroinflammation, and balance pathway disruption.

Why do I feel dizzy when I stand up?
This may reflect autonomic dysfunction or POTS-like symptoms affecting circulation and heart rate regulation.

Is Lyme dizziness the same as vertigo?
Not always. Some patients feel lightheaded, off balance, or disconnected rather than experiencing a spinning sensation.


Dr. Daniel Cameron, MD, MPH
Lyme disease clinician with over 30 years of experience and past president of ILADS.

SymptomsTestingCoinfectionsRecoveryPediatricPrevention

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