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Effects of Vestibular Exercises and Motor Control in Cervicogenic Dizziness

R

Riphah International University

Status

Completed

Conditions

Cervical Pain

Treatments

Other: Vestibular Group
Other: Motor Control Group

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT05125250
REC/00963 Amber

Details and patient eligibility

About

The feelings of imbalance, unsteadiness, and disorientation with cervicogenic dizziness is not clear. It has been suggested that a disruption of the normal afferent signals from the upper cervical proprioceptors to the vestibular nucleus results in an inaccurate depiction of head and neck orientation in space due to highly developed proprioceptive system that allows the neuromuscular control of cervical spine and effective use of vital organs in the head through unique connections to the vestibular and visual systems. Motor Control Therapeutic Exercises and vestibular exercises have been used to increase motor control and reduce pain and disability in patients with neck pain.

Full description

Cervicogenic dizziness is defined as a sensation of instability or disequilibrium that occurs with the pain and stiffness in cervical spine and is aggravated by neck movements or positions. Dizziness is a common indication in people with cervical spine dysfunction. cervicogenic dizziness as "a nonspecific sensation of altered orientation in space and disequilibrium originating from abnormal afferent activity from the neck" which is thought to be caused by disorders in the upper cervical spine and commonly it is associated with cervical stiffness neck pain or headache.

Motor control can also be defined as the capacity of how the central nervous system produces of useful movements that are coordinated and integrated with the rest of the body and the environment. Thus, motor control therapeutic exercises (MCTE) are used to improve the conditions of patients. Motor Control Therapeutic Exercises have been used to increase motor control and reduce pain and disability in patients with neck pain. MCTE comprised of cranio-cervical flexor exercise, cranio-cervical extensor exercise, co-contraction of flexors and extensors, a synergy exercise for retraining the strength of the deep neck flexors.

Schenk et al. have published case studies in which they describe the diagnosis, treatment, and outcomes of a patient with cervicogenic dizziness co-managed by a vestibular and an orthopedic manual physical therapist. They argue that manual therapy combined with vestibular rehabilitation may be superior in the treatment of cervicogenic dizziness. Literature states that vestibular exercises have been used to increase motor control and reduce pain and disability in patients with neck pain.

Enrollment

34 patients

Sex

All

Ages

30 to 65 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • • Age: 30-65 years

    • Gender both
    • Pain and dizziness lasting for at least 3 months;
    • Pain intensity corresponding to at least 3 points on a 10-point numeric pain rating scale;
    • Restricted cervical range of movement (flexion, extension, rotation and side-bending);
    • Presence of neck pain associated with disability according to the NDI greater than or equal to 5 points;
    • Presence of subjective dizziness associated with pain, movement, stiffness or specific postures of the cervical region

Exclusion criteria

  • • Any other systemic or neurodegenerative pathology, presence of trauma or recent surgery to the head, face, neck or chest;

    • specific diagnosis of central or peripheral dizziness;
    • History of previous physical-therapy intervention for the cervical region;
    • Any cognitive impairment that hindered viewing of audiovisual material;
    • Difficulty understanding or communicating

Trial design

Primary purpose

Other

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

34 participants in 2 patient groups

Motor Control Group
Experimental group
Description:
This group will receive treatment which comprises of therapeutic exercises, During the first 4 weeks, motor control and ROM exercises will be prescribed in order to improve muscular endurance of deep flexors muscles and to improve the ROM of cervical spine in flexion, extension, rotation and side bending and lateral rotation in. These exercises will be performed at a rate of 3 sets and an intensity of 15 repetitions per day
Treatment:
Other: Motor Control Group
Vestibular Group
Active Comparator group
Description:
This Group will receive vestibular exercises which comprises of postural awareness training; Standing on a balance board, Foveal vision exercises.
Treatment:
Other: Vestibular Group

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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