Three-dimensional Virtual Reality Procedures in Vestibular Rehabilitation
Vestibular Diseases, Virtual Rehabilitation
About this trial
This is an interventional treatment trial for Vestibular Diseases
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
- right-handed patients affected by right chronic Unilateral Vestibular Hypofunction, the diagnosis of which will be achieved with at least 25% reduced vestibular response at bithermal water caloric irrigations on one side when calculated by means of Jongkees' formula after at least 3 months from the onset of symptoms.
Exclusion Criteria:
- negative anamnesis for malignancy,
- negative anamnesis for head trauma,
- negative anamnesis for neuropsychiatric disorders
- negative anamnesis for metabolic diseases
- negative anamnesis for cardiovascular diseases
- negative anamnesis for endocrine diseases
- treatment with drugs possibly impacting on auditory and visuo-vestibular functions
- negative anamnesis for infectious diseases
- negative anamnesis for otoneurological diseases
Sites / Locations
- UNITER ONLUS for balance and rehabilitation researchRecruiting
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
Experimental
Active Comparator
Head Mounted Device
Vestibular Rehabilitation
In addition to the Vestibular Rehabilitation protocol, each HMD group patient will perform Virtual Reality Rehabilitation by means of the game protocol "Track Speed Racing 3D" uninterruptedly for 20min/day, while sitting on a chair or sofa, after the smartphone accommodation into the HMD 'Revelation' 3D VR Headset. The game consists of a point-of-view race in which the car is steered from the cockpit by tilting the head to the left and to the right to avoid swerving off the road and to achieve all the goals before finishing the lap. During this real car experience, the visual background and the scenario change perspective according to the patients' left or right tilted head movements, possibly emulating eye-head exercises that induce visual-vestibular conflicts.
Patients will be actively involved in adapting the exercise program to suit their symptoms, capabilities, and lifestyle. Following previous protocols, the home exercise program will include a patient-tailored combination of adaptation (without and with the target moving in pitch and yaw planes for 1min each three times per day), substitution, habituation, and balance exercises, and all chronic unilateral vestibular hypofunction patients will be seen twice a week for 4 weeks for 30-45 min and monitored for adherence. Between supervised sessions, patients will perform a twice-daily home exercise program for a total of 30-40min/day.