What is the vestibular system?
What is vestibular rehabilitation?
Who can benefit from vestibular rehabilitation?
What conditions can be treated? What are the different types of vertigo?
What can I expect from treatment?
What is the vestibular system? | |
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Your vestibular system consists of the parts of your inner ear and brain that are responsible for keeping your balance. When these body parts become damaged or irritated, the result can be vertigo or dizziness. Vertigo is an intense sensation of spinning, sometimes associated with seeing the world spinning around you. Dizziness is harder to define: some people may experience it as a feeling of spinning or swaying, others may feel it as light-headedness or “fogginess”. Sometimes the two occur together, sometimes they occur on their own. Some people have problems with their balance as well as dizziness and vertigo. If this is the case your therapist will treat you with balance therapy as well as vestibular rehabilitation. |
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What is vestibular rehabilitation? | |
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Who can benefit from vestibular rehabilitation? | |
Anyone who is experiencing dizziness or vertigo can benefit from a vestibular rehabilitation evaluation and a trial of treatment. Most often symptoms of vertigo or dizziness can be eliminated or significantly reduced. Even when treatment does not help someone’s symptoms, the information obtained by finding out what the problem isn’t can help their doctor try medical options he or she might have not considered to find out what it is. Unfortunately, the benefits of vestibular rehabilitation may not be widely known by many physicians. You may have been told that your problem will “go away on its own”. This is sometimes true, but few of us would want to wait several weeks or longer suffering with constant dizziness or worrying about the next attack of vertigo when vestibular rehabilitation might help the problem much more quickly. You may have been told that “nothing can be done”, you have to “live with it”, however, the best available scientific evidence indicates that vestibular rehabilitation is an extremely effective method for helping people with dizziness and vertigo. |
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What conditions can be treated? What are the different types of vertigo? | |
A few of the more typical diagnoses and their treatments are listed below: BPPV (Benign Paroxysmal Positional Vertigo): BPPV is the most common cause of vertigo. In BPPV, small crystals that have a job to do in one part of the inner ear (called the otolith) make their way into the wrong part of the ear (called the semicircular canals, there are three in each ear). We don’t know why it happens but it is more likely to happen after a bump to the head and it is more likely to happen as we get older. This causes very intense vertigo lasting from a few seconds to a couple of minutes, most commonly when you look up or down or when you get in and out of bed. It may or may not be accompanied by a constant feeling of less intense dizziness or light-headedness. Treatment consists of helping you take your head and body through a specific set of movements that remove the crystals from where they don’t belong. The good news is that this is the easiest type of vertigo to treat with 80% of people getting better after one treatment and 90% getting better with two treatments. Vestibular Hypofunction: Vestibular hypofunction is what happens when one or both of your inner ears become damaged. Several of the conditions described below can result in vestibular hypofunction. Normally, even when you remain perfectly still, the vestibular portion of your inner ears is sending signals to your brain. Your brain is used to “listening” to two ears that are equally strong. When the signal from one side is weaker than the other, your brain does not know how to interpret this information and the result can be the sensation of vertigo or dizziness. If your therapist sees strong signs of vestibular hypofunction he or she may recommend that you see your doctor for tests to make sure that there isn’t something more serious causing the problem, as well as beginning your vestibular rehabilitation. Labyrinthitis/ Vestibular Neuronitis: Labyrinthitis and Vestibular Neuronitis are two different kinds of infection of the inner ear. In severe cases, symptoms may begin with constant intense vertigo lasting for more than a day. It is not uncommon for people in this circumstance to be sent to the hospital by their doctor to make sure that the vertigo is not being caused by something more serious like a stroke. The infection can cause damage resulting in a vestibular hypofunction that may be temporary or permanent. Afterwards you can have lasting dizziness or short bursts of vertigo when you move your head. Vestibular rehabilitation cannot fight the infection or repair the damage, but the resulting vestibular hypofunction can be treated. Acoustic Neuroma: An acoustic neuroma is a benign (non-cancerous) tumor on the nerve that goes from the ear to the brain. This condition must be monitored by a doctor who will determine if and when it requires surgery. The tumor itself and the side effects of surgery both can impair the ability of the inner ear signals to get to the brain, resulting in dizziness from a vestibular hypofunction. Vestibular rehabilitation will not help treat the tumor itself nor can it repair the damage to the nerve, but the resulting vestibular hypofunction can be treated. Meniere's Disease: Meniere's Disease causes attacks of constant intense vertigo lasting for hours and hours. Vestibular rehabilitation cannot do anything to stop these attacks. Sometimes after an attack you can have lasting dizziness or short bursts of vertigo when you move your head. This might be due to the disease damaging your vestibular system on one side and causing a vestibular hypofunction or due to your brain becoming hypersensitive to vestibular stimulation, both of which can benefit from vestibular rehabilitation. Central Vestibular Dysfunction: This refers to damage to the brain, such as from a stroke or a disease like multiple sclerosis, that causes dizziness or vertigo. Similar to the case of vestibular hypofunction, your therapist will identify appropriate exercises to stimulate the brain to learn to adjust to “the new normal” of its damaged state and learn to ignore the signals that it is currently interpreting as dizziness. Post Concussion Syndrome: Use of vestibular rehabilitation to treat people who have suffered a concussion, also called a mild traumatic brain injury, is a relatively new development. Concussion often results in a few weeks of unpleasant sensations such as dizziness, nausea, visual problems, and problems with concentration. Unfortunately, the only way to deal with this is to follow your doctor’s orders and rest. However, if these symptoms continue beyond several weeks, it may be time to try vestibular rehabilitation. Although not as well researched as vestibular hypofunction, studies show promising results when the methods of vestibular rehabilitation to desensitize the brain to symptom-provoking stimulation are used to treat these problems when they persist after a concussion. Chronic Subjective Dizziness: This is a catch-all term meaning “we don’t know why you feel dizzy all the time”. Some people appear normal on every test modern medicine has to offer and yet they still feel dizzy. One theory is that the vestibular part of the brain might have become “reset” by a mild case of BPPV or Labyrinthitis in the past, so that as the ear returned to normal the brain began to perceive it as abnormal. Another theory is that some people for some reason become “hypersensitive” to stimulation to their vestibular system. When dizziness has been interfering with someone’s life for a long time sometimes anxiety and worrying about the dizziness can contribute to the problem, sometimes not. Whatever the reason, vestibular rehabilitation can often help even in these cases where we don’t know what the cause of the problem is. Cervicogenic (Neck-muscle-related) Dizziness: Although its existence is controversial, many doctors and therapists believe that problems in the neck muscles can be the cause of dizziness. If your therapist suspects that this is the case, you will be given orthopedic treatment in addition to vestibular exercises. Migrainous Vertigo: There is a relationship between migraine headaches and vertigo that is not fully understood. Some attacks of vertigo, even without a headache, can be caused by migraines. Vestibular rehabilitation may or may not help relieve some of these symptoms. More importantly, if your therapist is able to identify signs of this problem you can speak to your doctor about managing your migraines. Motion Sickness: People who become nauseous because they are carsick, airsick, or seasick, but have no problems with dizziness have not been found to benefit from vestibular rehabilitation. Low Blood Pressure/ Low Blood Sugar: People who become dizzy due to low blood pressure or low blood sugar will not benefit from vestibular rehabilitation and should discuss their dizziness with their doctor. Hearing Loss or Tinnitus (Ringing in the Ears): Vestibular rehabilitation has no effect on hearing. |
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What can I expect from treatment? | |
Your treatment will be different depending on what problems are identified. Treatment will usually be 30 to 60 minutes once a week or once every two weeks. As noted above, BPPV is usually the easiest type of vertigo to treat. Your therapist will help you move your head and body through what is called a Canalith Repositioning Maneuver (CRM), sometimes called Epley Maneuver: these are a series of positions, which involve lying down and rolling over, that will help move the small crystals out of the semicircular canal. In some less common and more difficult to treat forms of BPPV, different maneuvers, which involve quick head and body movements or a special way for you to roll over and sleep for one night, might be needed. Research has shown that in 80% of cases a single treatment is all that is required for relief. Rarely, long lasting dizziness, without intense vertigo, may persist for some time. This is usually treatable with vestibular rehabilitation exercises. For forms of vertigo and dizziness other than BPPV, the treatment of choice is the performance of vestibular rehabilitation exercises. These are simple exercises, most of which involve eye and head movement for no more than a few minutes, performed a few times a day. In order to be effective, these exercises must cause a brief and mild increase in your dizziness, usually for no more than a few minutes. Vestibular rehabilitation exercises reduce the sensation of dizziness over time by presenting your brain with controlled stimulation from the vestibular system, the visual system, and the body. If you give the brain too little stimulation it will not learn, if you give it too much stimulation you will feel very dizzy and likely ruin the rest of your day. The job of the vestibular rehabilitation specialist is to determine the right type and amount of exercise to stimulate the brain just enough to learn. Often symptoms improve significantly or resolve completely over a few weeks as the brain learns to compensate for whatever problem caused the dizziness in the first place. Visits to your therapist every week or every second week are used to check how your symptoms are improving and to adjust the exercise program to ensure the correct amount of stimulation to the brain. Vestibular rehabilitation for conditions other than BPPV requires active participation in your home exercise program for several minutes, several times a day, every day. If your therapist finds that you are having balance problems as well as dizziness, you will most likely also be given exercises for Balance Therapy. |