JAMA: Emergency Department Vestibular Rehabilitation Therapy for Dizziness and Vertigo A Nonrandomized Clinical Trial

פוסט זה זמין גם ב: עברית

Key Points                                               

Question  What is the feasibility of offering vestibular therapy for patients presenting to the emergency department (ED) with dizziness and collecting longitudinal patient-reported outcomes?

Findings  In this nonrandomized clinical trial of 125 patients with dizziness, ED physical therapists successfully applied a protocolized diagnostic classification and treatment algorithm. Patients receiving ED vestibular therapy reported greater improvements in dizziness handicap, vestibular activities avoidance, and sedating medication use during 3 months of follow-up, although the differences were not statistically significant in this pilot trial.

Meaning  The findings of this trial suggest that ED vestibular therapy is feasible and may improve patient-reported dizziness symptoms over time; this pilot trial establishes the need for a fully powered randomized clinical trial of ED vestibular therapy for dizziness and vertigo.

Abstract

Importance  Dizziness symptoms account for nearly 2 million annual emergency department (ED) visits and present a diagnostic challenge for clinicians. Most dizziness research has focused on improving guideline-concordant care among clinicians, with little focus on developing patient-centered interventions to improve dizziness-related disability.

Objective  To examine the feasibility of ED vestibular rehabilitation therapy (ED-VeRT) using a protocolized diagnostic classification algorithm and collection of longitudinal patient-reported outcomes.

Design, Setting, and Participants  A pilot nonrandomized clinical trial of ED-VeRT vs usual care for patients presenting to the ED with dizziness at a single urban US ED was conducted from November 16, 2021, to February 6, 2023, with collection of 3-month outcomes through May 1, 2023. Patients were allocated to ED-VeRT or usual care at the discretion of the treating physician.

Interventions  Use of ED-VeRT was delivered by an ED physical therapist via a protocolized diagnostic classification and treatment algorithm based on a diagnosis of benign paroxysmal positional vertigo, triggered undifferentiated dizziness, spontaneous undifferentiated dizziness, or unilateral peripheral hypofunction.

Main Outcomes and Measures  Feasibility outcomes included participant screening, enrollment, and retention rates to inform the design of a future randomized clinical trial; retention was defined as completing any of 4 follow-up surveys over 3 months. The primary efficacy outcome was change in the Dizziness Handicap Inventory score; the secondary efficacy outcome was change in the Vestibular Activities Avoidance Inventory-9 score.

Results  Of 366 patients screened, 125 participants were enrolled (median age, 52 [IQR, 40-66] years, 73 [58%] female, 61 [49%] White), and 105 retained (84.0%) in longitudinal data collection. Sixty-three participants (50.4%) received ED vestibular therapy and were assigned to primary diagnostic classifications of benign paroxysmal positional vertigo (23 [37.1%]), triggered undifferentiated dizziness (14 [22.6%]), spontaneous undifferentiated dizziness (14 [22.6%]), or unilateral peripheral hypofunction (9 [14.5%]). Despite having higher Dizziness Handicap Inventory and Vestibular Activities Avoidance Inventory scores at baseline, ED-VeRT participants reported lower dizziness handicap (difference: −1.68; 95% CI, −11.30 to 7.90) and vestibular activities avoidance (difference: −2.27; 95% CI, −8.40 to 3.86) at 3 months, although these differences were not statistically significant.

Conclusions and Relevance  In this nonrandomized clinical trial, ED vestibular therapy was feasibly delivered to patients presenting to the ED with undifferentiated dizziness symptoms. For participants receiving vestibular therapy the findings for dizziness-related disability over 3 months were not statistically significant, pointing to the need for a fully powered randomized clinical trial.

השארת תגובה

חייבים להתחבר כדי להגיב.

גלילה לראש העמוד
Open chat
Scan the code
האיגוד הישראלי לרפואהה דחופה
שלום, קשר ישיר עם ההנהלת האתר איך אפשר לעזור?

Direct contact with the website management
How can we help?
דילוג לתוכן