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Peripheral Vestibular Disease clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Peripheral Vestibular Disease.

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NCT ID: NCT01442623 Completed - Clinical trials for Peripheral Vestibular Disease

Conventional Versus Virtual Reality Based Vestibular Rehabilitation

Start date: February 2011
Phase: Phase 2/Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

Dizziness is a common and disabling symptom and is associated with unsteadiness in both standing and walking, sometimes resulting in falls. People who have any of these problems often have a disease process affecting the inner ear. A proportion of people will recover spontaneously over time; those that do not may benefit from a specialized form of physiotherapy known as vestibular rehabilitation. This consists of exercise regimes that are individualized to each person depending on their problems. These regimes aim to decrease dizziness, help patients to re-learn movement patterns and improve their balance during standing and walking. There is considerable research supporting vestibular rehabilitation but it is not clear what is the best type, setting or frequency of treatment. How therapy impacts on walking ability is also not clear. Recent developments have suggested that force plate and virtual reality therapies may benefit. This form of therapy can provide feedback that is unavailable with conventional exercises. Exposure to virtual environments can challenge balance which helps to retrain it. The aim of this study is to compare conventional vestibular rehabilitation with a force plate/virtual reality therapy based vestibular rehabilitation, using a universally available virtual reality system (Nintendo Wii Fit Plus®). In this study, consenting patients with a vestibular disorder will be assigned randomly to either a conventional treatment or a virtual reality based treatment that is customized to their individual problems. They will receive treatment for 8 weeks. The effects of treatment will be measured by state of the art computerized analysis of walking and balance. Questionnaires that obtain information about how severe their dizziness is will also be administered. The study will help therapists understand how inner ear problems affect walking and balance. It will also provide information on the optimum method of providing vestibular rehabilitation and thus improve patient care.