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Exercise and Vestibular Hypofunction

Not Applicable
Recruiting
Conditions
Vestibular Vertigo
Vestibular Disease
Vestibular Disorder
Interventions
Other: Exercise for bilateral or unilateral vestibular hypofunction patients
Other: Conventional rehabilitation treatment
Registration Number
NCT05192564
Lead Sponsor
University of the Basque Country (UPV/EHU)
Brief Summary

Vestibular hypofunction is a heterogeneous clinical entity that arises after a vestibular pathway injury, which if not properly compensated becomes chronic, and very often disabling, presenting with postural instability, blurred vision with cephalic movement, oscillopsia, and subjective sensation of dizziness and imbalance. People diagnosed with vestibular hypofunction, because of their clinical condition, often tend to reduce physical activity and lead to a sedentary life, despite the fact that exercise has been shown to improve postural stability, and it is a determining factor in recovery after vestibular injury. Physical activity improves the quality of life and reduces the risk of falls. Supervised exercise is, therefore, among the potentially beneficial adjuvant programs in this population, although little has been studied in comparison with other pathologies. Furthermore, in vestibular hypofunction, there is insufficient evidence on specific interventions in specific clinical situations, the amount of exercise, and the optimal duration of the programs. Therefore, the aims of the study are 1) to analyze the effects on balance by an 8-week period of a supervised exercise program in people with a diagnosis of bilateral or unilateral vestibular hypofunction and 2) to examine the effect of six-months detraining subsequent to intervention. Secondary objectives are to examine the additional effect of the intervention on health-related quality of life, psychological well-being, cardiorespiratory fitness, body composition, blood pressure, physical activity level, sedentary behavior, and sleep quality.

Detailed Description

Interventional study with two randomized groups (attention control '\[AC\] and exercise group,\[EX\]) with assessment pre and post-intervention (8 weeks) and 6 months follow-up.

The AC group will perform only the home vestibular rehabilitation exercises that are usually prescribed in consultation with this type of patient, performing the same assessments as the intervention group in all phases of the study.

The participants in the EX group will exercise under the supervision of specialists in exercise and sports physical educators two non-consecutive days per week for eight weeks at the Faculty of Education and Sport of the University of the Basque Country (UPV/EHU). All sessions will start and end with blood pressure measurements and exercise intensity will be monitored by heart rate monitors (Polar Electro, Kempele, Finland) and through the original Borg scale (6-20). All sessions will include a 5-10 min warm-up with joint mobility exercises and gait technique and a 10 min cooldown with basic stretching exercises and controlled breathing. The main part of the session will consist of: 1) balance exercises, multidirectional displacements and strength with postural control, implementing 8-10 exercises integrating the main muscle groups and motor patterns, 2) aerobic exercise on bicycle (15 min) developed progressively in intensity (R1-mild, R2-moderate, R3-vigorous) implementing an intervallic design at low volume. The physical exercise intensity ranges (R1-mild, R2-moderate, R3-vigorous) will be defined on an individualized basis from the initial stress test and based on ventilatory thresholds. At the end of the intervention, participants will be provided with information on physical activity recommendations. Both intervention and control group patients will have all antivertiginous drugs withdrawn.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
RECRUITING
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
78
Inclusion Criteria
  • Patient with bilateral or unilateral vestibular hypofunction.
  • More than 6 months since the onset of vestibular hypofunction (chronic instability).
  • Age over 18 years old.
  • No previous rehabilitation treatment for vestibular hypofunction other than home exercises.
Exclusion Criteria
  • Fluctuating instability (not present every day).
  • Recent onset instability (less than 6 months old, susceptible to complete clinical recovery).
  • Current neurological pathology.
  • History of neurosurgical disease, cerebrovascular disease, neurodegenerative disease or with central nervous system sequelae.
  • Uncorrected ocular disorders.
  • History of peripheral neuropathy in the lower extremities.
  • Arthropathy or motor defects in lower limbs.
  • Prolonged use of sedatives or vestibular suppressant medication.
  • Significant medical disorders: including uncontrolled arterial hypertension, chronic or recurrent respiratory, neuromuscular or psychiatric diseases; musculoskeletal problems that interfere with physical exercise; immunodeficient diseases or a positive HIV test; anemia, blood disorders, chronic thrombotic disorders or hypercoagulant states; malignant tumors within the last five years, with the exception of therapeutically controlled skin cancer; any other disease that may be affected or aggravated by physical exercise.
  • Being pregnant or breastfeeding.
  • Have plans to be out of town for more than two weeks.

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
EX GroupConventional rehabilitation treatmentConventional rehabilitation treatment plus exercise intervention under the supervision of exercise specialists two non-consecutive days per week for eight weeks.
EX GroupExercise for bilateral or unilateral vestibular hypofunction patientsConventional rehabilitation treatment plus exercise intervention under the supervision of exercise specialists two non-consecutive days per week for eight weeks.
AC Group - ATTENTION CONTROL GROUPConventional rehabilitation treatmentConventional rehabilitation treatment at home with unsupervised exercise intervention
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Balance8-week time

Computerized Dynamic Posturography testing can objectively measure a patient's three sensory inputs at one time during the Sensory Oorganization Test. It can provide insight into where the balance disturbance may be developing from and more importantly, which one of the sensory inputs shows a problem. The human body uses three sensory inputs to maintain balance proper balance, they are: Vestibular (inner ear system), Somatosenory (feet, ankles, joints), Vision (eyes). These sensory inputs interact with the brain, which then drive and control our motor functions. Computerized Dynamic Posturography is a unique assessment technique used to objectively quantify and differentiate among these three sensory inputs, along with motor, and central adaptive impairments to balance control.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Cardiorespiratory fitness8-week time

Peak Cardiopulmonary exercise test on bicycle ergometer.

Health-related Quality of life8-week time

Measured by Dizziness Handicap Inventory Questionnaire It contains a total score (100 items) and scores in the physical (28 items), functional (36 items) and emotional (36 items) subscales.

Scores greater than 10 points should be referred to balance specialists for further evaluation.

16-34 Points (mild handicap) 36-52 Points (moderate handicap) 54+ Points (severe handicap)

Depression8-week time

Measured by Beck Depression Inventory (BDI) 21 Likert-type items. The maximum score is 63 points, with the following classification: 0-13, minimal depression; 14-19, mild depression; 20-28, moderate depression; and 29-63, severe depression.

Physical activity level8-week time

Measured by accelerometry (8 days) in the non-dominant wrist.

Blood pressure8-week time

Ambulatory blood pressure monitoring (AMBP) is accomplished with a special device that consists of a blood pressure cuff that is worn on the arm and is attached to a small recording device that you wear on your belt. The participant will wear the ABPM device for 24 hours, and it records your blood pressure periodically (30-min intervals) throughout that period, during your routine daily activities and while you are sleeping.

Body composition8-week time

Biolectrical impedance for estimating % of body fat-mass, muscle-mass, and water.

Anxiety8-week time

Beck Anxiety Inventory (BAI). 21 items. The maximum score is 63 points, 25.7±11.4 being considered an anxiety score.

Physical activity and sedentary behaviour8-week time

International physical activity questionnaire (IPAQ) short-version. It consists of seven questions to capture average daily time spent sitting, walking, and engaging in moderate and vigorous PA over the last seven days.

Assessment of gait, balance and risk of falls8-week time

Dynamic Gait Index (DGI): composed of 8 exercises each scored from 0 (severe impairment) to 3 (highest level of functionality); maximum score: 24 points; a score \< 19 is predictive of falls.

Waist circumference8-week time

Stand and place a tape measure around your middle, just above your hipbones. Measured in cm

Body mass index (BMI)8-week time

BMI is a person's weight in kilograms divided by the square of height in meters.

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Faculty of Education and Sport

🇪🇸

Vitoria-gasteiz, Basque Country, Spain

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