Questioning the Impact of Vestibular Rehabilitation in Mal de Debarquement Syndrome.

IF 1.6 4区 医学 Q2 AUDIOLOGY & SPEECH-LANGUAGE PATHOLOGY
Audiology and Neuro-Otology Pub Date : 2024-01-01 Epub Date: 2023-10-11 DOI:10.1159/000533684
Assan Mary Cedras, Karina Moin-Darbari, Kim Foisy, Sylvie Auger, Don Nguyen, François Champoux, Maxime Maheu
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Introduction: Mal de debarquement syndrome (MdDS) is a rare and poorly understood clinical entity defined as a persistent sensation of rocking and swaying that can severely affect the quality of life. To date, the treatment options are very limited. Even though vestibular rehabilitation (VR) efficacy following peripheral vestibular lesion is well-documented, little is known about its influence on MdDS. The objective of the study was to explore the influence of traditional VR program on postural control in a patient diagnosed with MdDS.

Methods: We assessed 3 different participants: 1 healthy control; 1 participant with identified peripheral vestibular impairment (VI); 1 participant diagnosed with MdDS. Postural control was assessed using a force plate (AMTI, Accusway). Participants were assessed following the modified Clinical Test Sensory Integration Balance protocol (mCTSIB, eyes open on firm surface/eyes closed on firm surface/eyes open on foam/eyes closed on foam). The raw data were exported and analyzed in a custom-made Matlab script (Matlab R2020a). We retrieved the center of pressure velocity in both anterior-posterior and mediolateral directions and performed an analysis of the frequency content using Daubechies wavelet of order 4 with 6 levels of decomposition. Protocol VI and MdDS patients performed a 4-week VR program. Postural control, using a force plate, and Dizziness Handicap Inventory (DHI) were assessed before and after the VR program. Healthy control was assessed twice separated by 1 week without any specific intervention.

Results: VI participant showed clear improvement on DHI and sway velocity on condition eyes closed with foam. Accordingly, a reduction of energy content within frequency bands (0.39-0.78 Hz and 0.78-1.56 Hz) was observed post-rehabilitation for VI participant in both conditions with foam. Interestingly, MdDS participant demonstrated a reduction in sway velocity in most of the conditions but the frequency content was not modified by VR and was comparable to healthy control. Accordingly, the DHI of the MdDS participant failed to demonstrate any difference following VR.

Conclusion: The results of the present study question the use of VR as an efficient treatment option for MdDS. Future studies must recruit a larger sample size and focus on the relationship between illusion of movement and postural characteristics such as sway velocity.

质疑前庭康复对Mal de Debarquement综合征的影响。
引言:Mal de debarquement综合征(MdDS)是一种罕见且鲜为人知的临床实体,其定义为持续的摇摆感,会严重影响生活质量。迄今为止,治疗选择非常有限。尽管外周前庭损伤后的前庭康复(VR)疗效已得到充分证明,但对其对MdDS的影响知之甚少。本研究的目的是探讨传统VR程序对诊断为MdDS患者姿势控制的影响。方法:我们评估了3名不同的参与者:1名健康对照;1名被试患有外周前庭损伤(VI);1名参与者被诊断为MdDS。使用力板(AMTI,Accusway)评估姿势控制。根据改良的临床测试感觉统合平衡方案(mCTSIB,眼睛在坚硬表面睁开/眼睛在坚硬的表面闭上/眼睛在泡沫上睁开/眼睛闭上泡沫)对参与者进行评估。在定制的Matlab脚本(Matlab R2020a)中导出并分析原始数据。我们检索了前后方向和内侧方向上的压力速度中心,并使用具有6个分解级别的4阶Daubechies小波对频率内容进行了分析。方案VI和MdDS患者进行了为期4周的VR项目。在VR项目前后评估姿势控制、力量板和眩晕障碍量表(DHI)。在没有任何具体干预的情况下,对健康对照组进行两次评估,间隔1周。结果:VI参与者在泡沫闭眼的情况下,DHI和摆动速度有明显改善。因此,在使用泡沫的两种情况下,VI参与者在康复后观察到频带(0.39-0.78Hz和0.78-1.56Hz)内的能量含量降低。有趣的是,MdDS参与者在大多数情况下都表现出摇摆速度的降低,但VR没有改变频率内容,与健康对照组相当。因此,MdDS参与者的DHI在VR后没有表现出任何差异。结论:本研究的结果对VR作为MdDS的有效治疗选择的使用提出了质疑。未来的研究必须招募更大的样本量,并关注运动错觉与摇摆速度等姿势特征之间的关系。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Audiology and Neuro-Otology
Audiology and Neuro-Otology 医学-耳鼻喉科学
CiteScore
3.20
自引率
6.20%
发文量
35
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: ''Audiology and Neurotology'' provides a forum for the publication of the most-advanced and rigorous scientific research related to the basic science and clinical aspects of the auditory and vestibular system and diseases of the ear. This journal seeks submission of cutting edge research opening up new and innovative fields of study that may improve our understanding and treatment of patients with disorders of the auditory and vestibular systems, their central connections and their perception in the central nervous system. In addition to original papers the journal also offers invited review articles on current topics written by leading experts in the field. The journal is of primary importance for all scientists and practitioners interested in audiology, otology and neurotology, auditory neurosciences and related disciplines.
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