OBJECTIVE: To compare the effectiveness of vestibular rehabilitation by using Cawthorne-Cooksey exercises with that of instrumental rehabilitation. DESIGN: The main study (n=32) used a pre-post rehabilitation (A-B) design; the ancillary studies used a subset of 11 patients 1 month before rehabilitation versus pre-post rehabilitation (A-A-B design) and 9 patients pre-post rehabilitation versus 1 month after (A-B-B design). SETTING: Division of physical therapy and rehabilitation at a scientific institute in Italy. PARTICIPANTS: Patients (Cawthorne-Cooksey, n=17; instrumental rehabilitation, n=15) with a complete or incomplete unilateral vestibular lesion due to ischemic, inflammatory, cranial nerve VIII sectioning, or unknown cause. INTERVEN...
Purpose: Postural stability improvements have been observed using vibrotactile feedback (VTF), but t...
Objective: To determine the effect of vestibular exercises on the recovery of visual acuity during h...
Abstract Background: Multiple sclerosis (MS) is caused by thedestruction of myelin in central nervo...
Objective: To compare the effectiveness of vestibular rehabilitation by using Cawthorne-Cooksey exer...
Objective: To assess the efficacy of vestibular rehabilitation exercises on patients with chronic un...
Objective To assess the effectiveness of three vestibular rehabilitation protocols in patients with ...
OBJECTIVE: To assess the efficacy of vestibular rehabilitation exercises on patients with chronic un...
Objective: To assess the efficacy of vestibular rehabilitation exercises on patients with chronic un...
WOS: 000348755800007PubMed ID: 24755774Background. Bilateral vestibular dysfunction causes serious d...
OBJECTIVE: To assess the efficacy of a balance rehabilitation treatment by using both a powered pla...
Rehabilitation therapy is proved to be effective in reducing disability in patients with persistent ...
Objective: To assess the efficacy of a balance rehabilitation treatment by using both a powered plat...
WOS: 000268981000008PubMed ID: 19651266Giray M, Kirazli Y, Karapolat H, Celebisoy N, Bilgen C, Kiraz...
(1) Objective: To determine the effect of a directed vestibular rehabilitation therapy (VRT) program...
Background and Purpose: Training to improve responses to perturbations may be beneficial for individ...
Purpose: Postural stability improvements have been observed using vibrotactile feedback (VTF), but t...
Objective: To determine the effect of vestibular exercises on the recovery of visual acuity during h...
Abstract Background: Multiple sclerosis (MS) is caused by thedestruction of myelin in central nervo...
Objective: To compare the effectiveness of vestibular rehabilitation by using Cawthorne-Cooksey exer...
Objective: To assess the efficacy of vestibular rehabilitation exercises on patients with chronic un...
Objective To assess the effectiveness of three vestibular rehabilitation protocols in patients with ...
OBJECTIVE: To assess the efficacy of vestibular rehabilitation exercises on patients with chronic un...
Objective: To assess the efficacy of vestibular rehabilitation exercises on patients with chronic un...
WOS: 000348755800007PubMed ID: 24755774Background. Bilateral vestibular dysfunction causes serious d...
OBJECTIVE: To assess the efficacy of a balance rehabilitation treatment by using both a powered pla...
Rehabilitation therapy is proved to be effective in reducing disability in patients with persistent ...
Objective: To assess the efficacy of a balance rehabilitation treatment by using both a powered plat...
WOS: 000268981000008PubMed ID: 19651266Giray M, Kirazli Y, Karapolat H, Celebisoy N, Bilgen C, Kiraz...
(1) Objective: To determine the effect of a directed vestibular rehabilitation therapy (VRT) program...
Background and Purpose: Training to improve responses to perturbations may be beneficial for individ...
Purpose: Postural stability improvements have been observed using vibrotactile feedback (VTF), but t...
Objective: To determine the effect of vestibular exercises on the recovery of visual acuity during h...
Abstract Background: Multiple sclerosis (MS) is caused by thedestruction of myelin in central nervo...