Vestibular Rehabilitation for Dizziness and Balance Disorders - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Vestibular Rehabilitation for Dizziness and Balance Disorders

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Though BPPV is seen by most as the most common vestibular disorder, only ~8% receive effective tx. Definitions Dizziness Light headedness Feeling faint Unsteady ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Vestibular Rehabilitation for Dizziness and Balance Disorders


1
Vestibular Rehabilitation for Dizziness and
Balance Disorders
  • Spalding Rehabilitation Hospital
  • Vicki Council, PT
  • Karin J. George, MS PT

2
Life is Good
3
Objectives
  • Be familiar with the anatomy and physiology of
    the vestibular system
  • Have a basic understanding of the assessments for
    vertigo and balance
  • Be familiar with the treatment strategies to
    address vestibular and balance disorders

4
Vestibular Rehabilitation
  • Evaluation to discover deficits and details
    regarding symptoms
  • Develop program with goal of retraining the brain
    to recognize and process signals from the
    vestibular system in coordination with the visual
    and proprioceptive systems.

5
A Need for Intervention
  • 4 (8 million) of American adults report having
    a chronic balance problem. An additional 1.1
    (2.4 million) report chronic problems with
    dizziness alone.
  • Overall, the cost of medical care for patients
    with balance disorders exceeds 1 billion/year in
    the United States.
  • Though BPPV is seen by most as the most common
    vestibular disorder, only 8 receive effective
    tx.

6
Definitions
  • Dizziness
  • Light headedness
  • Feeling faint
  • Unsteady
  • Dysequilibrium

7
Definitions
  • Vertigo
  • A specific spinning sensation
  • An illusion of motion
  • The feeling that you or your environment is moving

8
Definitions
  • Imbalance
  • Stumbling, difficulty walking straight or turning
    a corner
  • Clumsiness or difficulty with coordination
  • Tendency to fall

9
Balance Systems
  • Sensory
  • Visual - eyes orient
  • Vestibular - inner ear system that registers the
    head and movement in space
  • 3 components
  • Gaze stabilization
  • Postural Control
  • Perception of movement
  • Proprioceptive - involves the joint and muscle
    receptors that let us know where we are in space

10
Balance Systems
  • Motor
  • Strength
  • Coordination
  • Cardiorespiratory/endurance
  • ROM
  • Reaction time

11
Anatomy and Physiology of the Inner Ear
12
Anatomy and Physiology of the Inner Ear
  • Bony Labyrinth Houses the membranous labyrinth.
    Filled with perilymph fluid (similar to CSF).
  • Membranous Labyrinth Consists of the otolith
    organs and semi-circular canals. Filled with
    endolymph (similar to intracellular fluid).

13
Membranous Labyrinth
  • Otolith Organs
  • Utricle Responsible for horizontal translation
    of the head and head tilt
  • Saccule Responsible for vertical translation of
    the head.
  • Combined, they sense linear acceleration and
    static tilt of the head with respect to the
    gravitational axis.
  • Maculae Sensory receptor for the otolith
    organs. A gelatinous matrix surrounds the
    hair cells. Otoconia are embedded on top of the
    maculae in the otolithic membrane..

14
Membranous Labyrinth
  • Semi-circular Canals (SSC)
  • Three fluid filled loops responsible for sensory
    input related to head velocity and angular
    acceleration.
  • Enables the VOR to generate eye movements to
    match head movements, resulting in clear vision
    during head movement.
  • Cristae sensory structure for the SSC that sense
    angular movement
  • Cupula gelatinous mass surrounding the hair
    cells of the cristae in the SSC.

15
Membranous Labyrinth
  • Hair Cells
  • Endolymph fluid within the SSC and otolith organs
    move the hair cells according to head movement.
  • The direction of deflection of the hair cells
    tells the brain how the head is moving.
  • Resting Vestibular Tone Firing rate 100
    spikes/sec at rest, increases on ipsilateral
    side and decreases on contralateral side related
    to head movement.

16
Anatomy and Physiology of the Inner Ear
17
Central Processing
  • Electrical activity generated from the inner ear
    travels to
  • Vestibular nuclei in the brainstem
  • Cerebellum
  • Emetic center in the brainstem

18
Dizziness Diagnosis
  • Unilateral Peripheral Vestibular Loss
  • Nystagmus
  • Falling/loss of balance to affected side
  • Possible Cerebellar Dysfunction
  • True Vertigo
  • Bilateral Peripheral Vestibular Loss
  • Usually no vertigo
  • Oscillopsia
  • Ataxia
  • Imbalance

19
Dizziness Diagnosis
  • Related to specific health issues
  • Vestibular Neuritis
  • Viral Labyrinthitis
  • CVA
  • Acoustic neuroma
  • Ototoxicity

20
Vestibular Pathologies Seen in Head Injury
  • Endolymphatic hydrops or post-traumatic
    Menieres disease
  • Vestibular migraine
  • Labyrinthine concussion
  • Perilymphatic fistula
  • Brainstem injury

21
Dizziness Diagnosis
  • Duration of Spells
  • Seconds BPPV
  • Orthostatic Hypotension
  • Minutes Migraines
  • TIAs
  • Hours/Days Menieres Disease
  • Hydrops

22
ENT Testing
  • Hearing Test
  • Videonystagmography (VNG)- test of lateral
    semi-circular canal
  • Vestibular evoked myogenic potentials (VEMP)-test
    of otolithic function
  • Electrocochleography (ECoG)- test for
    endolymphatic hydrops (Menieres disease)
  • Platform Posturography- Assesses use of all
    sensor systems-visual, vestibular, somatosensory

23
Vestibular Evaluation
  • Subjective
  • Dizziness
  • What makes it better, worse, duration, frequency,
    intensity
  • Falls
  • Dizziness Handicap Index
  • History including test results/medications

24
Vestibular Evaluation
  • Objective
  • Vision and eye/head coordination
  • Eye movement range
  • Smooth pursuits
  • End point nystagmus
  • Gaze evoked nystagmus
  • Saccades
  • Skew eye deviation
  • Spontaneous nystagmus
  • VOR Cancellation
  • Visual/Vestibular Ocular Interaction Reflex

25
Vestibular Evaluation
  • Vertiginous Positions/movements requires that
    the patient be placed in 16 positions monitoring
    level of dizziness, nystagmus and length of time
    of dizziness.
  • Hallpike assesses BPPV

26
Dix Hallpike Position
27
Vestibular Evaluation
  • Strength
  • ROM
  • Joint position sense
  • Sensation
  • Gait

28
Vestibular Evaluation
  • Balance Tests
  • BERG
  • Dynamic Gait
  • Balance Evaluation-Systems Test (BEST)
  • Balance Master(sensory organization test)

29
Smart Balance Master
30
Smart Balance Master
  • Sensory Organization Test
  • Force plate system
  • Moving surround
  • Uses 3 senses for postural control-vestibular,
    visual, somatosensory.
  • Looks at the ability to differentiate the
    differences in accurate inputs, choose the most
    useful input, and perceive the correct position
    in space.

31
Red Flags
  • Sudden loss of hearing or fluctuation in hearing
  • Pressure and fullness to point of pain/discomfort
  • Fluid from ears
  • Severe ringing in ears
  • Other undiagnosed central signs

32
Medications
  • Anticholinergics Antihistamines
  • Meclizine
  • Antivert
  • Phenergan
  • Benzodiazepines
  • Valium
  • Klonapin
  • Ativan

33
Vestibular Treatment
  • Central Compensation
  • Adaptive Plasticity
  • Central Sensory Substitution
  • Tonic Rebalancing
  • Habituation

34
Treatment
  • Symptom driven
  • Head/eye movements
  • Position progression
  • Support surface
  • Eyes open/closed
  • Environment
  • Manual Interventions
  • Canalith Repositioning (BPPV)

35
Vestibular Treatment
  • Rehab strategies
  • Retraining
  • Habituation
  • Adaptation
  • Compensation

36
Vestibular Treatment
  • Motor Learning
  • HEP based on deficits
  • Education
  • Manual Interventions
  • Referrals to other providers

37
Time Frames
  • Simple
  • 3-4 sessions
  • Complex-involving multiple systems
  • 6-18 months
  • Patient compliance
  • 6 to 18 months

38
Team Role
  • Know general signs and symptoms
  • Gather information and refer patient to
    appropriate specialists
  • Repeat education to patient and family
  • VEDA (Vestibular Disorders Association)

39
Conclusion
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