Posturographic sensory ratios provide evidence for neuroplasticity after computerized vestibular rehabilitation therapy in a single group interventional trial

Abstract Background Vestibular deficits are common and debilitating. Many patients do not achieve satisfactory resolution of their symptoms with standard rehabilitation techniques. This study seeks to measure changes in computerized dynamic posturography sensory ratio information after computerized...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Eytan A. David, Navid Shahnaz
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2025-04-01
Series:Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12984-025-01608-w
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Summary:Abstract Background Vestibular deficits are common and debilitating. Many patients do not achieve satisfactory resolution of their symptoms with standard rehabilitation techniques. This study seeks to measure changes in computerized dynamic posturography sensory ratio information after computerized vestibular retraining therapy (CVRT). Methods This prospective, single group, interventional study enrolled adult participants with stable, unilateral vestibular deficits. Before and after twelve twice weekly sessions of CVRT, and 4–6 and 10–12 months post-treatment, participants completed the Sensory Organization Test, from which sensory ratios (somatosensory - SOM, visual - VIS, vestibular - VEST, and visual preference - PREF) were calculated. Results 13 participants completed the intervention and post-retraining assessment; 9 completed the 4–6 and 10–12 month assessments. After CVRT, VIS increased by 11.6 (1.6 to 21.7) and VEST increased by 9.5 (0.6 to 18.3) and both remained significantly above baseline 10–12 months after treatment. The SOM and PREF ratios changed negligibly. Participants with mild disability (DHI ≤ 30) showed no change while participants with moderate-to-severe disability (DHI > 30) had significantly greater improvements in VIS (P = 0.0006) and VEST (P = 0.02) across all three post-treatment assessments. Conclusions CVRT was associated with durable improvement in VIS and VEST sensory ratios and improved postural control under conditions that favour use of vestibular information, consistent with increased weighting of vestibular information over vision. Trial registration Clinicaltrials.gov registration NCT04875013; 04/27/2021.
ISSN:1743-0003