Neuro Simplified • Easy to Digest Neuro Rehab
In this episode of Neuro Simplified, we look at a 2025 comprehensive review on vestibular rehabilitation after stroke. The review highlights an important gap in stroke rehab: many stroke survivors experience dizziness, gaze instability, balance problems, gait impairments, and vestibulo-ocular reflex deficits, yet vestibular rehab is not always emphasized in standard stroke rehabilitation. The authors explain that eye movement disorders may be present in a large portion of stroke survivors, and vestibular dysfunction can contribute to falls, poor postural control, reduced mobility, and slower recovery. We break down what vestibular rehab can include, such as VOR x1 and VOR x2 exercises, gaze stabilization, habituation, balance training, gait training, head-turn walking, sensory reweighting, and endurance work. The biggest clinical takeaway: vestibular rehab should not be one-size-fits-all. It should be tailored to the patient’s specific symptoms, lesion presentation, visual dependence, balance deficits, and recovery response. This episode is for clinicians who treat stroke and want to think beyond strength, tone, and mobility, because sometimes the missing piece is the system helping patients keep their world still while they move. Source: Fan H, Ding Y, Elmadhoun A, Mangal R, Feng J, Geng X. Vestibular rehabilitation in patients with stroke: a comprehensive review of past and current evidence. Brain Circ. 2025;11(2):107-112. doi:10.4103/bc.bc_16_23.
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