Yes. My original otologist diagnosed me with Meniere's based on having both vestibular signs and hearing loss. It has since been ruled out by much more thorough Otologists because:Forgive me if I am mistaken, but did you not list your cause of tinnitus as Ménière's?
A) My electrocochleagram was normal after all but incredibly the first Otologists didn't read the results and assumed it was abnormal (yes, really).
B) I had a history of Lyme disease from 2005 and that can produce a Meniere's-like hydropic disease and again an assumption was made by the first otologist.
In any case, my hearing loss was timed with high dose antibiotic use (was being trial-treated for Lyme when I had the vestibular episodes with no known cause) not the vestibular episodes.
Truthfully, I didn't get a thorough workup until I went to OK in June. My new Otologist highly doubts--if not completely ruled out Meniere's--because of many factors including normal imaging, normal Electrocochleagram x 2, and most importantly, my hearing loss was not at all timed with vestibular issues. For instance, I had a 48 hour continuous rotational vertigo attack last fall and had no tinnitus, ear fullness or loss. Those happened after high dose antibiotics.
It appears i was misdiagnosed and it's likely the "Meniere's" was from something else (vestibular migraines?). I haven't had a vertigo attack since April as well.
I think I have two separate issues which less thorough drs never like: ototoxicity and vestibular migraines (which have gotten much better).