VESTIBULAR PROBLEMS
​Vestibular facts
​
Dizziness or vertigo affects 20-30% of adults under 65 years of age causing occupational consequences, interference with daily activities and lower quality of life
More than 90% of patients with dizziness are treated by their GP without any involvement of a specialist
Vestibular rehabilitation and particle repositioning manoeuvres are currently the best treatment options for dizziness and vertigo
What is vestibular rehabilitation?
​
Vestibular rehabilitation (VR) is an exercise-based treatment approach provided by specialist physiotherapists or other health professionals to improve dizziness, vertigo and unsteadiness caused by vestibular disorders in order to improve function in activities of daily living and quality of life
What symptoms we see
​
-
Dizziness
-
Vertigo
-
Unsteadiness
What conditions we treat
​
-
Benign paroxysmal positional vertigo (BPPV)
-
Vestibular hypofunction
-
Vestibular neuritis
-
Labyrinthitis
-
Acoustic neuroma
-
Ototoxicity
-
Age-related
-
Trauma (see post-concussion syndrome)
-
-
Vestibular migraine
-
Meniere's disease
-
Post-concussion syndrome
-
Motion hypersensitivity
Approach to treatment
​
A thorough examination will be completed to identify the possible cause/causes of your symptoms from which an individualised treatment plan will be formed and may include advice and education, repositioning manoeuvres and progressive exercises to target gaze stability, balance and strength
Expected outcomes
​
Response to VR varies depending on the presenting disorder:
-
BPPV can be cured in 1-2 sessions with particle repositioning manoeuvres being effective
-
Vestibular hypofunction symptoms improve with customised VR
-
Unstable and fluctuating disorders such as vestibular migraine and Meniere’s disease do not respond well to VR – however VR can still be useful as education is key for the long-term management of such disorders and treatment of secondary problems may be required
Dizziness
​
A non-specific description of spatial disorientation, an umbrella term to include sensations such as vertigo, light-headedness, faint feeling, disequilibrium and others
​
Vertigo
​
An illusion of movement – sensation of you or your surroundings spinning around
​
Benign Paroxysmal Positional Vertigo (BPPV)
Positional vertigo occurs with specific head positions such as lying down or sitting up, turning in bed, looking up or bending forward, typically brief attacks lasting less than a minute
Vestibular Hypofunction
Dysfunction of the peripheral vestibular system which can occur on one side (unilateral hypofunction) or both sides (bilateral hypofunction) and may be acute or chronic
Vestibular Neuritis
Acute onset of vertigo, nausea, vomiting and unsteadiness caused by inflammation of the vestibular nerve
Labyrinthitis
Acute onset of vertigo, nausea, vomiting, unsteadiness and hearing loss caused by inflammation of the labyrinth which affects hearing
Acoustic neuroma
Also known as a vestibular schwannoma - a non-cancerous (benign) tumour of the 8th cranial nerve – typically presents with progressive one-sided hearing loss / tinnitus and possible vertigo / dizziness. VR is most beneficial following surgery to aid recovery but may also be helpful when vestibular symptoms are present with small / slow growing tumours that are being monitored
Ototoxicity
Quite simply, ear poisoning (oto = ear, toxicity = poisoning), which results from medications causing unsteadiness
Vestibular Migraine
Attacks of spontaneous or positional vertigo lasting minutes to days, history of migraine, migraine symptoms during vertigo and migraine-specific triggers of vertigo such as diet, sleep, stress and environmental factors
Meniere's disease
Vertigo attacks lasting 20 minutes to several hours with one sided tinnitus, hearing loss and aural fullness. Fluctuating hearing loss with recovery in the early stages and progressive loss over years
Post-concussion syndrome
Vestibular complaints are common following head injury or concussion and often settle within a few weeks. However, if dizziness, vertigo or unsteadiness limit function or persist longer than a few weeks it would be beneficial to have a vestibular assessment.
​