मुख्य बातें
- BPPV (benign paroxysmal positional vertigo) is the most common cause of vertigo and can often be resolved in 1-3 physiotherapy sessions with repositioning manoeuvres
- The Epley manoeuvre has an 80-90% success rate for posterior canal BPPV and is performed by a trained physiotherapist or physician
- Vestibular rehabilitation therapy (VRT) uses three core strategies: habituation, gaze stabilisation, and balance retraining
- Not all dizziness is vertigo -- your physiotherapist will differentiate between peripheral vestibular, central, and non-vestibular causes
- Sudden vertigo with slurred speech, double vision, or difficulty walking requires emergency evaluation to rule out stroke
- Vestibular neuritis recovery takes 6-12 weeks with rehabilitation; without it, many patients develop chronic imbalance and anxiety
- Medication for vertigo (such as betahistine) manages symptoms but does not retrain the brain -- rehabilitation does
- Age-related vestibular decline is treatable and not something seniors should accept as inevitable
The room spins when you roll over in bed. You feel unsteady walking through a busy shopping mall. You cannot turn your head quickly without the world lurching sideways. Vertigo and dizziness are not just unpleasant -- they are disabling, and they make you afraid to move. The good news is that vestibular rehabilitation is one of the most effective treatments in physiotherapy, with many patients seeing dramatic improvement within weeks.
Dizziness is the third most common reason for medical consultation worldwide, and vertigo accounts for roughly a third of those cases. Despite this, vestibular rehabilitation remains underutilised. Many patients are prescribed medication alone and told to wait it out, which delays recovery and can allow compensatory habits to develop that make things worse. At DCDC in Dubai Healthcare City, we offer structured vestibular rehabilitation based on the specific diagnosis.
What Is the Difference Between Vertigo, Dizziness, and Imbalance?
These terms are often used interchangeably, but they describe different sensations and point to different problems. Vertigo is a false sense of spinning or movement -- the room rotates around you, or you feel like you are rotating. Dizziness is a broader term that includes lightheadedness, feeling faint, or a vague sense of disorientation. Imbalance is difficulty maintaining your centre of gravity, especially when standing or walking. A proper assessment distinguishes between them because the treatment differs significantly.
What Causes Vertigo? Understanding BPPV, Vestibular Neuritis, and Central Vertigo
The vestibular system sits in your inner ear and sends balance information to the brain. When something disrupts this system, the brain receives conflicting signals and you experience vertigo. However, vertigo can also originate in the brain itself (central vertigo), and distinguishing the two is critical. Your physiotherapist or neurologist will perform specific tests, including the Dix-Hallpike test, to identify the cause before starting treatment.
| Feature | BPPV | Vestibular Neuritis | Central Vertigo |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cause | Displaced calcium crystals (otoconia) in semicircular canals | Viral inflammation of the vestibular nerve | Stroke, MS, tumour, or migraine affecting brainstem/cerebellum |
| Onset | Triggered by head position changes (rolling in bed, looking up) | Sudden, often after viral illness | Variable; may be gradual or sudden |
| Duration of episode | Brief (10-60 seconds per episode) | Constant for days to weeks, then gradually improves | Variable; can be constant |
| Nausea/vomiting | Mild, brief | Severe in acute phase | Variable |
| Hearing loss | No | Usually no (if yes, consider labyrinthitis) | Possible depending on cause |
| Dix-Hallpike test | Positive with characteristic nystagmus | Spontaneous nystagmus present | Atypical nystagmus patterns |
| Treatment | Repositioning manoeuvres (Epley) | Vestibular rehabilitation exercises | Treat underlying cause; urgent investigation needed |
| Recovery timeline | 1-3 sessions for most cases | 6-12 weeks with rehabilitation | Depends on underlying condition |
This table is a clinical guide. Always seek professional assessment for accurate diagnosis.
How Does the Dix-Hallpike Test Diagnose BPPV?
The Dix-Hallpike test is the gold standard for diagnosing posterior canal BPPV, the most common type. Your physiotherapist will guide you from a seated position to lying back with your head turned 45 degrees to one side and slightly extended over the edge of the bed. If you have BPPV, this provokes a brief burst of vertigo and characteristic eye movements (nystagmus) after a short delay. The direction and pattern of the nystagmus tells the clinician exactly which canal is affected, which determines the correct repositioning manoeuvre.
What Is the Epley Manoeuvre and How Effective Is It?
The Epley manoeuvre is a sequence of head and body position changes designed to guide displaced calcium crystals (otoconia) out of the posterior semicircular canal and back into the utricle where they belong. It is performed by a trained clinician and typically takes 5-10 minutes. The success rate is 80-90% after one or two treatments, making it one of the most effective interventions in all of medicine. Some patients feel immediate relief; others notice improvement over 24-48 hours.
- Step 1: Start seated, head turned 45 degrees toward the affected ear
- Step 2: Lie back quickly with head hanging slightly over the table edge -- hold 30-60 seconds
- Step 3: Turn head 90 degrees to the opposite side -- hold 30-60 seconds
- Step 4: Roll onto your side, turning your head to face the floor -- hold 30-60 seconds
- Step 5: Slowly return to seated position
- Post-manoeuvre: Avoid lying flat for a few hours; sleep slightly elevated the first night
What Does Vestibular Rehabilitation Therapy Involve?
For conditions beyond BPPV -- such as vestibular neuritis, labyrinthitis, or age-related vestibular decline -- rehabilitation uses three core exercise strategies. These are prescribed based on your specific deficits and progressed over weeks as the brain adapts. The goal is central compensation: training the brain to rely on alternative balance inputs when the vestibular system is damaged.
Habituation Exercises
Habituation exercises involve repeated exposure to movements or visual stimuli that provoke dizziness. By performing these movements in a controlled way, the brain gradually reduces its abnormal response. For example, if turning your head to the right triggers dizziness, you would perform controlled head turns to the right repeatedly until the brain learns to process that movement without alarm.
Gaze Stabilisation Exercises
These exercises train the vestibulo-ocular reflex (VOR), which keeps your vision stable during head movement. The most common exercise involves fixing your eyes on a target (a letter on a card) while turning your head side to side at increasing speeds. This retrains the neural pathways that keep your vision clear when you move, reducing the blurred or bouncing vision many vestibular patients experience.
Balance Retraining
Balance retraining progressively challenges your stability in increasingly difficult conditions: firm surface to foam, eyes open to eyes closed, static to dynamic. The exercises teach the brain to better integrate visual, vestibular, and proprioceptive (body position) information for maintaining balance. This is particularly important for reducing fall risk in older adults with vestibular dysfunction.
When Does Vertigo Need Urgent Investigation?
Most vertigo is caused by benign peripheral vestibular conditions. However, vertigo can occasionally signal something serious. Seek emergency medical attention immediately if your vertigo is accompanied by any of the following warning signs, which may indicate stroke or another central nervous system problem:
- New, severe headache unlike any you have had before
- Slurred speech or difficulty speaking
- Double vision or sudden vision loss
- Numbness or weakness on one side of the face or body
- Inability to walk or severe stumbling (cerebellar signs)
- Vertical nystagmus or nystagmus that changes direction (central pattern)
- New hearing loss with vertigo (may indicate labyrinthitis or acoustic neuroma)
How Long Does Vestibular Rehabilitation Take to Work?
Recovery timelines vary significantly depending on the underlying condition. Here is what to expect with consistent vestibular rehabilitation at our neurorehabilitation clinic.
| Condition | Typical Recovery Timeline | Key Factors |
|---|---|---|
| BPPV | 1-3 sessions (days to weeks) | May recur in 30-50% of cases within a year; recurrences usually respond quickly to retreatment |
| Vestibular neuritis | 6-12 weeks | Younger patients and those who start rehab early recover faster; complete recovery in 60-70% |
| Labyrinthitis | 8-16 weeks | Similar to neuritis but may have residual hearing changes |
| Vestibular migraine | Ongoing management | Rehabilitation improves baseline balance; migraine management also needed |
| Age-related vestibular decline | 8-12 weeks for significant improvement | Maintenance exercises needed long-term; combines with falls prevention |
| Post-concussion dizziness | 4-12 weeks | Part of broader concussion rehabilitation |
Timelines assume consistent attendance and daily home exercise compliance.
Struggling with Vertigo, Dizziness, or Balance Problems?
Do not let dizziness control your life. Our vestibular rehabilitation team at DCDC Dubai Healthcare City will identify the cause and create a targeted treatment plan. BPPV can often be resolved in a single session.
Book a Vestibular Assessment
अक्सर पूछे जाने वाले प्रश्न
Final Thoughts
Vertigo and dizziness are among the most treatable conditions in rehabilitation medicine, yet many patients suffer for months or years without proper assessment. The key is accurate diagnosis -- BPPV, vestibular neuritis, and central vertigo require completely different approaches, and generic "balance exercises" without proper assessment waste time and can even be harmful.
If you are experiencing vertigo, dizziness, or balance problems in Dubai, our team at DCDC Dubai Healthcare City can perform a thorough vestibular assessment and start targeted treatment. For BPPV, you may walk out of your first session feeling dramatically better. For other vestibular conditions, a structured rehabilitation programme will progressively restore your confidence and function.
स्रोत एवं संदर्भ
यह लेख हमारी चिकित्सा टीम द्वारा समीक्षित है और निम्नलिखित स्रोतों का संदर्भ देता है:
- Cochrane Review - The Epley Manoeuvre for Posterior Canal BPPV (2014)
- Journal of Neurology - Clinical Practice Guideline: Vestibular Rehabilitation (2021)
- American Physical Therapy Association - Vestibular Rehabilitation CPG (2022)
- BMJ Best Practice - Benign Paroxysmal Positional Vertigo
- Lancet Neurology - Acute Vestibular Syndrome: Diagnosis and Management (2023)
इस साइट पर चिकित्सा सामग्री DHA-लाइसेंस प्राप्त चिकित्सकों द्वारा समीक्षित है। हमारी देखें संपादकीय नीति अधिक जानकारी के लिए।
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