View clinical trials related to Peripheral Vestibular Disorder.
Filter by:The objective of this study is to carry out the cross-cultural adaptation of the Mini BESTest (a balance assessment scale) into Argentine Spanish, as well as to study its validation in patients with peripheral vestibular disorders in the autonomous city of Buenos Aires.
70 patients with peripheral vestibular disorders will be included in the study. Half of the subjects will receive vestibular rehabilitation exercises and the other half will receive additional cervical exercises. Results from the two groups will be compared.
This parallel-group randomized controlled trial aims to determine if the location of the lesion(s) in the vestibular system (unilateral versus bilateral, lateral semi-circular canal versus otolith) impacts the effectiveness of adjunct take-home head-mounted display (HMD) virtual reality (VR) therapy in improving patient symptomatology. Fifty patients meeting inclusion criteria will be recruited from the principal investigator's neurotology clinic. Baseline symptomatology questionnaires will be completed, followed by random allocation to virtual reality and control groups. Vestibular rehabilitation and virtual reality protocols will be adhered to for 4 to 8 weeks, followed by symptomatology questionnaires. Data analysis will be conducted to answer the study's objectives.
There are only a few cases of isolated lateral canal deficit described in the literature. This study would focus on this group of patients in order to establish an evolving profile, a recovery behavior that we could compare to that in the literature. In addition, the evolving profile as well as the other clinical criteria identified would allow investigators to make hypotheses as to the pathology responsible for a given evolutionary profile. The population studied is represented by adult patients admitted by the emergency consultation service of otolaryngology of the University Hospitals of Strasbourg for an acute unilateral vestibular deficit whose examination at the VHOT shows a reduced and isolated gain of a lateral semicircular canal.
Randomized clinical trial with a control group that aims to evaluate the effects of a manual therapy protocol, together with a physical therapist-directed vestibular rehabilitation program, in patients with unilateral peripheral vestibular hypofunction. The intervention period will last approximately 4 weeks. Outcome measures will be collected at baseline, just after the intervention, as well as 1 and 6 months after the intervention.
Persons with a vestibular (e.g. inner ear) disorder often report visual induced dizziness (ViD) symptom (i.e. postural and/or gait instability, dizziness, disorientation) provocation or exacerbation in environments with busy or conflicting visual motion including crowds and supermarkets. ViD is frequently associated with high disability levels, prolonged illness and poorer clinical outcome. Thus, effective treatment is a priority. Vestibular rehabilitation incorporating structured exposure to Optokinetic Stimulation (OKS) (e.g. a form of computer based intervention that involves the observation of moving visual targets to encourage visual scanning) significantly improves ViD symptoms with similar improvement noted for both 'low-tech' OKS provided via a DVD or a 'high-tech', expensive, full-field stimulus. No studies have investigated if 'lower-tech', cheaper Virtual Reality (VR) systems may be beneficial in treating ViD symptoms and whether these VR systems are more effective than an OKS DVD. The first aim of this work is to compare the effect of an OKS DVD vs "lower-tech" VR system on ViD symptoms in persons with a chronic peripheral vestibular disorder aged 18-50 years old. This study may help to identify more optimal treatment strategies in persons with a vestibular disorder.