The aim of this international study is to better understand how vestibular disorders affect daily life, including physical balance, vision and movement tolerance, emotional wellbeing, and cognitive functioning. Vestibular disorders are common but often difficult to diagnose because symptoms vary widely from one patient to another. To improve clinical care, we need large-scale information on the real-world experience of patients across different countries and clinical settings. The UCLouvain Vertigo International Survey (UVIS) collects standardized information from adults with confirmed vestibular disorders, including questionnaires about dizziness-related handicap, emotional symptoms, and cognitive-vestibular complaints. Ear-nose-throat (ENT) specialists also provide routine clinical test results, such as caloric testing, vestibular evoked myogenic potentials (cVEMP and oVEMP), video head impulse tests (vHIT), and posturography. By combining these data, the study aims to identify different patient profiles and to examine how subjective symptoms relate to the physiological function of the vestibular system. Participants take part during their routine clinical visit. They complete short questionnaires (on dizziness, anxiety, depression, cognitive symptoms, and daily functioning), and their ENT specialist encodes the results of the vestibular tests already performed as part of their usual care. No additional medical tests are required for the study. By comparing data from several centers in Belgium, France, and the United States, this project seeks to provide a more complete picture of vestibular disorders worldwide and to support the development of better diagnostic tools and more personalized rehabilitation strategies.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
250
Medical University of South Carolina
Charleston, South Carolina, United States
Cliniques universitaires Saint-Luc
Brussels, Belgium
Hopital européen Marseille
Marseille, France
Assessment of dizziness-related handicap
DHI - Dizziness Handicap Inventory (25 items; physical, functional, emotional subscales). Scores 0-100. Higher scores = greater handicap.
Time frame: Through the entire study, approximately 36 months.
Assessment of emotional symptoms
HADS - Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (14 items; Anxiety and Depression subscales). Scores 0-21 per subscale. Higher scores = more symptoms
Time frame: Through the entire study, approximately 36 months.
Assessment of cognitive-vestibular complaints
NVI - Neuropsychological Vertigo Inventory (22 items assessing cognitive-vestibular symptoms: attention, memory, spatial orientation, visuospatial abilities). Higher scores = more complaints
Time frame: Through the entire study, approximately 36 months.
Vestibular Physiological Function - canal paresis percentage
Time frame: Through the entire study, approximately 36 months.
Vestibular Physiological Function - cVEMP and oVEMP
Time frame: Through the entire study, approximately 36 months.
Vestibular Physiological Function - video Head Impulse Test
Time frame: Through the entire study, approximately 36 months.
Vestibular Physiological Function - Posturography
Time frame: Through the entire study, approximately 36 months.
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