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Vestibular Rehabilitation for Dizziness in Hearing Impaired Children.

R

Riphah International University

Status

Completed

Conditions

HEARING IMPAIRED CHILDREN

Treatments

Other: Gaze stability exercises
Other: Brandt-Daroff Exercises

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT04413084
REC/00653 Poshmal butt

Details and patient eligibility

About

There is a need to manage dizziness in vestibular dysfunction patients with the vestibular rehabilitation to improve the life style of these patients. Vestibular rehabilitation exercises are beneficial for the vestibular dysfunction patients because they decrease dizziness and visual symptoms, increase walking and balance functions and with this the general activity level also increases. In my study my goal is to apply two different vestibular exercise and check their effects on dizziness in hearing impaired children's.

Full description

Dizziness is not a disease it is one of the most common symptoms of vestibular dysfunction. There are mainly two types of vestibular dysfunction central and peripheral vestibular dysfunction. Signs of vestibular dysfunction are vertigo, nystagmus, visual instability on head movement, spinning, double vision, May or may not have hearing loss or tinnitus. Due to these problem the patient feel difficulty in movements and in other activities, asymmetrical posture in sitting or standing. patients who experience dizziness report a significant disability that reduces their quality of life.

Vestibular system is consist of two parts central vestibular system and peripheral vestibular system. Peripheral part is consist of three semi-circular canals and otolith organs. The three semi-circular canals horizontal, posterior and anterior respond to angular acceleration and are right angle to one another. Semi-circular canals are filled with endolymph. Which move freely within each canal in response to the direction of the angular head rotation. The saccule and utricle make up the otolith organ which respond to the linear acceleration and the static head tilt. Three main functions of the peripheral vestibular system is stabilize visual images during head movement, maintain postural stability during head movement and providing information about the environment. In the central vestibular system brainstem processes provide primary control of many vestibular reflex. Connection with the thalamus, vestibular cortex and reticular system enable the vestibular system to aware of arousal and conscious awareness of the body and discrimination between the self and environment.

In children, vestibular function plays an important role in postural and gross motor development control. Children with congenitally profound hearing loss suffer vestibular dysfunction in both ears, and loss of postural control. Maintaining and development of postural stability is a multisystem process it does not only depend on vestibular input. Maturational changes in proprioceptive and visual, central nervous system processing, and coordination of motor output are responsible for the changes in postural skills observed through adolescence. Infants and young children are dependent on the visual system to maintain balance. As they grow older, begin to use somatosensory and vestibular information properly. Between the 3 sensory inputs in children, the vestibular system seems to be the slightest effective in postural control.

Children with early sensorineural hearing loss and bilateral vestibular dysfunction present with delayed gross motor development. These children stand and walk later than their peers. Difficulties in maintaining balance can lead to challenges in normal childhood activities e.g. riding a bicycle or hopping. Reduced ability to participate in normal play with other children may result in social isolation. In hearing impaired children vestibular dysfunction is common. It was mentioned in a study held in 2013 that 88% of hearing impaired children suffer from vestibular dysfunction. This could mainly be due to hearing and vestibular impulses pass via the vestibule-cochlear nerve. Another study in 2018, found that vestibular dysfunction to be around 50% in hearing impaired children.

Gaze stability and Brandt-Daroff exercises are two different type of exercises which are used for rehabilitation of dizziness in hearing impaired patients. A type of habituation exercise is Brandt- Daroff exercises which are easy to perform. Brandt- Daroff exercises cause the debris to get dislodged from the cupula of the posterior semi-circular canal and will no longer effect cupula during the head movements. Bandt-Daroff exercises are performed with quick head rotations while watching a visual target and sustaining focus on the visual target during head movements. Gaze stability exercises designed to improve the gaze stability. These exercises require the individual to fixate on a visual target during horizontal or vertical head movement.

Enrollment

20 patients

Sex

All

Ages

8 to 17 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Children with hearing impairment of both genders, those diagnosed with vestibular dysfunction by ear nose and throat specialist.
  • Bilateral hearing loss
  • Mild to moderate hearing loss
  • Age between 8 to 17 years.
  • Any test of the following four tests positive (Dix Hall Pike test, Supine Roll's test, Fukuda Stepping Test and Sharpened Romberg's test) were included in the study

Exclusion criteria

  • Children receiving some other form of treatment for vestibular dysfunction.
  • Suffering from other systemic disorders.
  • Musculoskeletal disorders like fractures, strains, sprains leading to imbalance, central or peripheral neurologic diseases leading to disturbed balance.
  • Those who were handicapped were excluded from the study.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

20 participants in 2 patient groups

Gaze stability exercises
Experimental group
Description:
Group I will receive Gaze stability exercises.
Treatment:
Other: Gaze stability exercises
Brandt-Daroff Exercises
Experimental group
Description:
Group II will receive Brandt-Daroff Exercises.
Treatment:
Other: Brandt-Daroff Exercises

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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