| Literature DB >> 29946294 |
Ahmad H Alghadir1, Shahnawaz Anwer1.
Abstract
Vestibular rehabilitation (VR) has been shown to be effective for many vestibular disorders. This review focuses on the current evidence on the effects of physical therapy in the management of vestibular symptoms in individuals with a vestibular migraine (VM). The individuals with a history of a migraine tend to have a high incidence of vestibular symptoms with some or all of their headaches. A total of six included studies investigated the effects of VR in the management of VM. The critical review form for quantitative studies was used to appraise quality assessment and risk of bias in the selected studies. Previous studies validated the use of VR in the treatment of vestibular symptoms for individuals with a VM to include improved headache and migraine-related disability in patients with a VM. From the current evidence, it is difficult to provide conclusive evidence regarding the efficacy of VR to minimize vestibular symptoms in patients with VM. Therefore, more randomized controlled studies are required to make firm evidence on the effect of VR in reducing vestibular symptoms in patients with VM. The future prospective, blinded, randomized controlled studies may help to isolate possible therapeutic effects of VR and other general effects.Entities:
Keywords: dizziness; migraine; physical therapy; vertigo; vestibular rehabilitation
Year: 2018 PMID: 29946294 PMCID: PMC6005864 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2018.00440
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.003
Diagnostic criteria for vestibular migraine (38).
| A. | At least 5 episodes with vestibular symptoms of moderate or severe intensity, lasting 5 min to 72 h. |
| B. | Current or previous history of migraine with or without aura according to the International Classification of Headache Disorders (ICHD). |
| C. | One or more migraine features with at least 50% of the vestibular episodes: – headache with at least two of the following characteristics: one sided location, pulsating quality, moderate or severe pain intensity, aggravation by routine physical activity – photophobia and phonophobia, – visual aura. |
| D. | Not better accounted for by another vestibular or ICHD diagnosis. |
| A. | At least 5 episodes with vestibular symptoms of moderate or severe intensity, lasting 5 min to 72 h. |
| B. | Only one of the criteria B and C for vestibular migraine is fulfilled (migraine history or migraine features during the episode). |
| C. | Not better accounted for by another vestibular or ICHD diagnosis. |
Results of the quality assessment using the Critical Review Form–Quantitative Studies (72).
| Whitney et al. ( | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | 11/15 | 73.3 | ||||||
| Wrisley et al. ( | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | No | No | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | 10/15 | 66.7 | ||||||
| Gottshall et al. ( | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | 9/15 | 60 | ||||||
| Vitkovic et al. ( | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | 13/15 | 86.7 | ||||||
| Sugaya et al. ( | Yes | Yes | No | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | 13/15 | 86.7 | ||||||
1, Purpose; 2, Background; 3, Design; 4, Sample details; 5, Sample size justification; 6, Consent; 7, Reliability; 8, Validity; 9, Investigation details; 10, Contamination avoided; 11, Results as statistics; 12, Statistics appropriate; 13, Clinical importance; 14, Drop outs; 15, Appropriate conclusions.
The evaluation of risk of bias is based on sample/selection bias (item # 4), measurement/detection bias (item # 7 and 8), and performance bias (item # 9 and 10) as shown in bold items.
Study characteristics.
| Whitney et al. ( | Patients with migraine-related vestibulopathy (MRV) or vestibular dysfunction with a history of migraine headache | Mean (SD): 20.9 (26.7) Range: 1–120 | Mean (SD): 54.2 (18.7) Range: 20–89 | DHI ABC DGI | Habituation exercises, balance and gait training, general strengthening and stretching exercises. | Retrospective case series. | Outcomes improved following intervention. Mean DHI improvement was 12 points ( | Patients with migraine headache and MRV showed improvement in physical function and self-perceived abilities following vestibular rehabilitation. | |
| Wrisley et al. ( | Patients with VM Comparator: VI with no migraine | Mean (SD): 14.6 (NR) Range: NR | Mean (SD): 53.8 (17.8) Range: NR | DHI ABC DGI TUG | General strengthening and stretching exercises, canalith repositioning technique, habituation training, and balance retraining exercises. | Retrospective case series. | Percentage of patients who improved clinically significant amount on each outcome in patients with or without history of migraine are as follow: DHI (32% vs. 53%; | Patients with vestibular disorders with or without a history of migraine showed positive changes in both subjective and objective outcomes of balance following vestibular rehabilitation. | |
| Gottshall et al. ( | Patients with migraine-related vestibular symptoms | More than 6 months Range: 6 months to 3 years | Mean (SD): 32 (NR) Range: 11–56 | DHI ABC DGI CDP | Habituation exercises, balance retraining exercises, aerobic training, swimming, or cycling exercises. | A prospective cohorts study | Outcomes improved following intervention. Mean DHI improvement was 30 points ( | Patients with migraine-associated dizziness showed beneficial outcome following vestibular rehabilitation. | |
| Vitkovic et al. ( | Patients with VM Comparator: VI with no migraine | Mean (SD): 139 (NR) Range: NR | Mean (SD): 46.8 (NR) Range: 28–70 | DHI ABC VSI VRBQ FGA | Gaze stability, static tilt, habituation, gait and balance training. | A prospective assessor-blinded comparative study | Mean improvement of each outcome in patients with vestibular migraine or vestibular impairment groups are as follow: DHI (15.57 vs. 13.61); ABC (14.15 vs. 10.1); VSI (5.33 vs. 5.63); VRBQ (−15.72 vs. −22.09); and FGA (5 vs. 5.83). | This study has recommended the use of vestibular rehabilitation for VM patients who subjectively notice their symptoms more severely than other patients even though having comparable peripheral vestibular outcome. | |
| Sugaya et al. ( | Patients with dizziness, VM, and tension type headache | Mean (SD): NR Range: NR | Mean (SD): 47.7 (18.2) Range: NR | HIT DHI HADS | The vestibulo-spinal reflexes (VSR) and vestibulo-ocular reflex (VOR) training exercise. | A prospective comparative study | Outcomes improved following intervention in the tension-type headache and VM groups. Mean improvements of each outcome in the tension-type headache or VM groups are as follow: HIT (6 vs. 7 points); DHI (20 vs. 20 points); and HADS (1.79 vs. 3.02). | Patients with VM, dizziness and tension-type headache demonstrated improvement of headache, dizziness, and psychological factors after vestibular rehabilitation. |
VM, vestibular migraine; DHI, dizziness handicap inventory; ABC, activities based confidence scale; VSI, vestibular symptom index; VRBQ, vestibular rehabilitation benefit questionnaire; FGA, Functional gait assessment; DGI, Dynamic Gait Index; TUG, Timed up and go test; HIT, Headache Impact Test; HADS, Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale; CDP, computerized dynamic posturography; NR, Not reported.