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Laryngoscope 2002 Oct;112(10):1785-90
The effect of age on vestibular rehabilitation outcomes.
Whitney SL, Wrisley DM, Marchetti GF, Furman JM.
Department of Physical Therapy, School of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences,
University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15260, USA.
whitney@pitt.edu
OBJECTIVE: The purpose of the retrospective chart review was to
compare vestibular rehabilitation outcomes in young versus older
adults.
STUDY DESIGN: Retrospective
matched design. METHODS: Twenty-three persons with vestibular
disorders aged 20 to 40 years were matched by gender, vestibular diagnosis,
and vestibular function test results to 23 older adults aged
60
to 80 years.
The patients
were treated with a custom-designed physical therapy exercise
program. Patients
completed the Dizziness Handicap Inventory, the Activities-Specific
Balance Confidence (ABC) scale, and the Dynamic Gait Index; number
of falls;
and rated the severity of their dizziness. The two-sample test,
the Mann-Whitney test,
and McNemar's test for correlated proportions were used to determine
whether
there was a difference in scores between the two age groups at
the beginning and end of physical therapy. RESULTS: During the
initial
evaluation,
older adults reported having statistically greater space and
motion discomfort and more severe symptoms on a scale of 0 to 100. Younger adults had more impaired DGI scores and
a higher proportion of caloric testing abnormalities. After rehabilitation,
overall improvement was seen in both the younger and older populations.
There were no statistical differences between the two groups on the DHI,
the DGI,
reported symptoms at discharge, or number of falls. When only the complete
matched-pair data were analyzed, there were no statistically significant
differences between the age groups in the proportion of patients demonstrating
clinical
improvement. CONCLUSION: Age does not significantly influence the beneficial
effects of vestibular rehabilitation for persons with vestibular disorders.
PMID: 12368616 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
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