A Speed-based Approach to Vestibular Rehabilitation for Peripheral Vestibular Hypofunction: A Retrospective Chart Review

BACKGROUND: Current vestibular rehabilitation for peripheral vestibular hypofunction is an exercise-based approach that improves symptoms and function in most, but not all patients, and includes gaze stabilization exercises focused on duration of head movement. One factor that may impact rehabilitat...

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Main Authors: Roller, Robert Alen, Hall, Courtney D.
Format: Others
Published: Digital Commons @ East Tennessee State University 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dc.etsu.edu/etsu-works/5374
https://dc.etsu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=6578&context=etsu-works
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spelling ndltd-ETSU-oai-dc.etsu.edu-etsu-works-65782019-11-01T03:35:08Z A Speed-based Approach to Vestibular Rehabilitation for Peripheral Vestibular Hypofunction: A Retrospective Chart Review Roller, Robert Alen Hall, Courtney D. BACKGROUND: Current vestibular rehabilitation for peripheral vestibular hypofunction is an exercise-based approach that improves symptoms and function in most, but not all patients, and includes gaze stabilization exercises focused on duration of head movement. One factor that may impact rehabilitation outcomes is the speed of head movement during gaze stability exercises. OBJECTIVE: Examine outcomes of modified VOR X1 exercises that emphasize a speed-based approach for gaze stabilization while omitting substitution and habituation exercises. Balance training focused on postural realignment and hip strategy performance during altered visual and somatosensory inputs. METHODS: A retrospective chart review of 159 patients with vestibular deficits was performed and five outcome measures were analyzed. RESULTS: All outcomes – self-report dizziness and balance function, dynamic gait index, modified clinical test of sensory interaction and balance, and clinical dynamic visual acuity improved significantly and approached or achieved normal scores. CONCLUSIONS: The combination of modified VOR X1 gaze stability exercises, wherein patients achieved high-velocity head movement (240°/s) during short exercise bouts, with “forced use” gait and balance exercises for postural realignment and hip strategy recruitment, achieved 93–99% of normal scores for all five outcomes. These results compare favorably to the outcomes for current VR techniques and warrant further investigation. 2018-03-13T07:00:00Z text application/pdf https://dc.etsu.edu/etsu-works/5374 https://dc.etsu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=6578&context=etsu-works http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ ETSU Faculty Works Digital Commons @ East Tennessee State University vestibular rehabilitation peripheral vestibular hypofunction outcomes Physical Therapy Rehabilitation and Therapy Speech Pathology and Audiology
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic vestibular rehabilitation
peripheral vestibular hypofunction
outcomes
Physical Therapy
Rehabilitation and Therapy
Speech Pathology and Audiology
spellingShingle vestibular rehabilitation
peripheral vestibular hypofunction
outcomes
Physical Therapy
Rehabilitation and Therapy
Speech Pathology and Audiology
Roller, Robert Alen
Hall, Courtney D.
A Speed-based Approach to Vestibular Rehabilitation for Peripheral Vestibular Hypofunction: A Retrospective Chart Review
description BACKGROUND: Current vestibular rehabilitation for peripheral vestibular hypofunction is an exercise-based approach that improves symptoms and function in most, but not all patients, and includes gaze stabilization exercises focused on duration of head movement. One factor that may impact rehabilitation outcomes is the speed of head movement during gaze stability exercises. OBJECTIVE: Examine outcomes of modified VOR X1 exercises that emphasize a speed-based approach for gaze stabilization while omitting substitution and habituation exercises. Balance training focused on postural realignment and hip strategy performance during altered visual and somatosensory inputs. METHODS: A retrospective chart review of 159 patients with vestibular deficits was performed and five outcome measures were analyzed. RESULTS: All outcomes – self-report dizziness and balance function, dynamic gait index, modified clinical test of sensory interaction and balance, and clinical dynamic visual acuity improved significantly and approached or achieved normal scores. CONCLUSIONS: The combination of modified VOR X1 gaze stability exercises, wherein patients achieved high-velocity head movement (240°/s) during short exercise bouts, with “forced use” gait and balance exercises for postural realignment and hip strategy recruitment, achieved 93–99% of normal scores for all five outcomes. These results compare favorably to the outcomes for current VR techniques and warrant further investigation.
author Roller, Robert Alen
Hall, Courtney D.
author_facet Roller, Robert Alen
Hall, Courtney D.
author_sort Roller, Robert Alen
title A Speed-based Approach to Vestibular Rehabilitation for Peripheral Vestibular Hypofunction: A Retrospective Chart Review
title_short A Speed-based Approach to Vestibular Rehabilitation for Peripheral Vestibular Hypofunction: A Retrospective Chart Review
title_full A Speed-based Approach to Vestibular Rehabilitation for Peripheral Vestibular Hypofunction: A Retrospective Chart Review
title_fullStr A Speed-based Approach to Vestibular Rehabilitation for Peripheral Vestibular Hypofunction: A Retrospective Chart Review
title_full_unstemmed A Speed-based Approach to Vestibular Rehabilitation for Peripheral Vestibular Hypofunction: A Retrospective Chart Review
title_sort speed-based approach to vestibular rehabilitation for peripheral vestibular hypofunction: a retrospective chart review
publisher Digital Commons @ East Tennessee State University
publishDate 2018
url https://dc.etsu.edu/etsu-works/5374
https://dc.etsu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=6578&context=etsu-works
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