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Unilateral Peripheral Vestibular Dysfunction: Reeducation and Spatial Orientation.

U

University of Zaragoza

Status

Completed

Conditions

Inner Ear Disease
Equilibrium; Disorder, Labyrinth
Spatial Navigation

Treatments

Other: Vestibular reeducation

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT03171181
Universidad de Zaragoza

Details and patient eligibility

About

Motor control includes postural control and voluntary movement. For an optimal motor control it is necessary that brain integrates vestibular, visual and somatosensorial inputs properly, in a nonlinear way. Vestibular system, as an afferent organ, encodes head position in relation to gravity and changes in its linear and angular acceleration. As vestibular central system, it plays an essential role in motor control and in orientation and spatial memory as well.

When a peripheral vestibular lesion occurs, elaboration, interpretation and processing of inputs are deficient and therefore motor control is altered to a greater or lesser degree. As process progress in time, there is a natural neuroplasticity that facilitates recovery or compensate vestibular function, although sometimes this process is incomplete and requires vestibular reeducation This study aims to assess changes in balance control, orientation and handicap perception in one case group with symptomatic unilateral peripheral vestibular dysfunction, before and after a rehabilitation programme (RV). To compare values obtained at the beginning and at the end of RV to those achieved by control group. Finally, this research aims to analyse evolution of spatial orientation quality in symptomatic and non symptomatic participants.

Full description

Intervention group: 30 people with a unilateral peripheral vestibular disorder (UPVD). Process lasting more than three months and symptomatic. Aged 18-66 years old.

Control group: 30 participants without UPVD, healthy for the purpose of study. No intervention group: 30 people with a unilateral peripheral vestibular disorder without symptomatology. Both groups also aged 18-66.

Balance quality was registered with static and dynamic posturography. For spatial orientation is was registered Visual vertical and visual orientation perception. Vestibular disability was also assessed. Variables were registered at the beginning and at the end of a vestibular reeducation in UPVD participants. Vestibular reeducation consisted of 10 sessions of vestibular rehabilitation using dynamic posturography and visual reeducation. Duration of each session: 40 minutes. Twice a week.

The aim is to compare data before and after intervention with those obtained in compensated patients and control group.

Enrollment

90 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 66 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • People diagnosed of UPVD
  • Length of process superior to three months
  • Normal vision or corrected by lens or glasses.

Exclusion criteria

  • Dizziness or balance alteration due to visual problem or lesion of CNS (central nervous system).
  • Balance disturbance due to a locomotor cause
  • Balance perturbation next to resolve.
  • Sharpening or acute phase os symptoms.
  • Difficulties with understanding commands.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Basic Science

Allocation

Non-Randomized

Interventional model

Single Group Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

90 participants in 3 patient groups

UPVD non compensated
Experimental group
Description:
Intervention group: 30 participants with unilateral peripheral vestibular disorders. Exposed to vestibular reeducation.
Treatment:
Other: Vestibular reeducation
control group
No Intervention group
Description:
Control group, to obtain reference values.
UPVD compensated
No Intervention group
Description:
Registered spatial orientation in a group of 30 participants with compensated lesion.

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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