Volume 14, Number 6
2004
PDF files of all articles are available from IOS
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Tai Chi and vestibular rehabilitation effects on gaze and whole-body stability
pp. 467 - 478
Chris A. McGibbon, David E. Krebs, Steven L. Wolf, Peter M. Wayne, Donna Moxley Scarborough, Stephen W. Parker
Tai Chi (TC) is a comparatively new intervention for peripheral
vestibular hypofunction, which is often treated with vestibular
rehabilitation (VR). We compared gaze stability (GZS),
whole-body stability (WBS) and footfall stability (FFS) during
locomotion among 26 people with vestibulopathy (VSP), randomized
into two treatment arms (13 TC and 13 VR). Each intervention
program was offered for 10 weeks. GZS improved more for VR than
for TC, but WBS (and FFS) improved more for TC than for VR.
There was a significant relationship between changes in GZS and
WBS for the VR subjects (r = 0.60, p = 0.01), but not for TC
subjects. There was a significant relationship between changes
in WBS and FFS for both VR (r = 0.65, p < 0.01) and TC (r =
0.58, p = 0.02) groups; the relationship disappeared in the VR
but not the TC group when controlling for GZS. These findings
suggest that VR and TC both benefit patients with VSP but via
differing mechanisms. Moreover, these data are the first to test
the assumption that improving gaze control among patients with
VSP perforce improves postural stability: it does not. We
conclude that GZS is most improved in those who receive VR, but
that TC improves WBS and FFS without improving GZS, suggesting
patients with VSP can rely on non-gaze related mechanisms to
improve postural control.
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