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RECRUITING
NCT05941039
NA

Effects of Vestibular Training on Postural Control of Healthy Adults Using Virtual Reality

Sponsor: Clarkson University

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

Postural instability is a common symptom of vestibular dysfunction that impacts a person's day-to-day activities. Vestibular rehabilitation is effective in decreasing dizziness, visual symptoms and improving postural control through several mechanisms including sensory reweighting. As part of the sensory reweighting mechanisms, vestibular activation training with headshake activities influence vestibular reflexes. However, combining challenging vestibular and postural tasks to facilitate more effective rehabilitation outcomes is under-utilized. The novel concurrent headshake and weight shift training (Concurrent HS-WST) is purported to train the vestibular system to directly impact the postural control system simultaneously and engage sensory reweighting to improve balance. Young healthy participants will perform the training by donning a virtual reality headset with an overhead harness on and a spotter present to prevent any falls. The investigators propose that this training strategy would show improved outcomes over traditional training methods by improving vestibular-ocular reflex (VOR) gains, eye movement variability, sensory reweighting and promoting postural balance. The findings of this study may guide clinicians to develop rehabilitation methods for vestibular postural control in neurological populations with vestibular and/or sensorimotor control impairment.

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

18 Years - 35 Years

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Enrollment

30

Start Date

2022-10-03

Completion Date

2025-08-30

Last Updated

2025-06-17

Healthy Volunteers

Yes

Interventions

DEVICE

Vestibular training using VR followed by Control

A cross-over design will be used with group one receiving the training intervention for 6 days, a 4-day washout period, and a 6-day no-training period.

DEVICE

Control followed by Vestibular training using VR

Group two will follow the reverse sequence.

Locations (1)

Clarkson University

Potsdam, New York, United States