Overview
Dizziness. A constant sense of being off-balance. The room spinning when you roll over in bed. These aren't symptoms people just live with and if you've been dealing with any of them, VRT may be something your doctor has already mentioned.
So what is it, really?
Vestibular Rehabilitation Therapy is an exercise-based treatment, but not the kind you'd find on a fitness app. It's specifically designed to address problems with the balance system the network of inner ear structures and brain pathways that keep you oriented in space.
When that system breaks down, ordinary things get hard. Turning your head too fast. Getting up from a chair. Walking through a busy room. Things most people do without thinking.
VRT works by giving the brain the right kind of input, repeatedly, until it gets better at making sense of the signals it's receiving. It's not about masking symptoms. It's about changing how the nervous system responds.
Why VRT Gets Recommended
Most people who end up in VRT have been dealing with one or more of these:
- Spinning sensations or vertigo
- Feeling unsteady on their feet
- Dizziness triggered by head movement
- Trouble focusing their vision while moving
- Sensitivity to motion
- A general sense of being off-kilter
- Falls, or near-falls that are happening more often
The aim is straightforward: bring those symptoms down, and help you move through daily life without second-guessing every step.
What makes VRT different from general exercise is that it's built entirely around what's causing your specific symptoms. Two people with dizziness can end up on completely different programmes.
Who Does It Help?
BPPV
Probably the most common cause of vertigo. Rolling over in bed, tilting your head back, bending down and suddenly the room is spinning. Repositioning manoeuvres combined with specific exercises can resolve this quite effectively.
Ménière's Disease
The vertigo attacks get a lot of attention, but many people with Ménière's struggle with balance even on their better days. VRT helps with that in-between instability and trains the brain to cope better with the fluctuations the condition causes.
Labyrinthitis and Vestibular Neuritis
Both hit fast and hard — sudden intense dizziness, nausea, the works. Once the worst of it settles, VRT steps in to support recovery and help rebuild confidence in movement.
Stroke-Related Balance Problems
Some strokes disrupt the brain areas responsible for balance and coordination. VRT can help recover function, improve stability, and support greater independence over time.
Central Vestibular Disorders
MS, traumatic brain injury, and other neurological conditions can cause balance symptoms that stick around. These cases need neurologist involvement because the problem originates in the central nervous system, not the inner ear alone. The approach is different.
How It Works
There's a term for what happens in the brain during VRT: vestibular compensation. Your brain has a real capacity to reorganise itself when given consistent, targeted input. Over time, it gets better at combining information from the inner ear, eyes, muscles, and joints into something coherent.
The exercises used depend on what's driving the symptoms. But there are a few core categories.
- Gaze Stabilisation Exercises that train your vision to stay focused while your head is moving. Helpful when walking through busy environments feels visually overwhelming.
- Habituation Exercises Deliberately doing movements that trigger symptoms, in a controlled way, so the brain gradually stops overreacting to them. Counterintuitive, but effective.
- Balance Retraining Building stability during standing, walking, and position changes. The bread and butter of most programmes.
- Canalith Repositioning For BPPV specifically. Guided head movements that shift displaced crystals in the inner ear back where they belong.
Your programme will be a mix of whatever's actually relevant to your diagnosis. Nothing gets thrown in for the sake of it.
What Patients Actually Notice
The benefits that tend to matter most to people:
During treatment
- Dizziness and vertigo becoming less frequent and less intense
- Steadier walking and better coordination
- Getting visual focus back during movement
- Feeling less anxious about moving around
- Lower fall risk
Returning to daily life
That last point comes up a lot. People start avoiding stairs, crowds, driving, social situations. VRT often marks the point where that starts to reverse.
- Returning to things they'd quietly stopped doing
How Long Does It Take?
For most inner ear conditions, some improvement shows up within a few weeks. Real, noticeable progress tends to happen over six to eight weeks.
For conditions involving the brain, the timeline stretches. Months, sometimes. That's not a failure of the treatment — it just reflects how much the brain needs to reorganise.
What influences recovery: the diagnosis itself, how severe things are, how consistently the exercises get done, and overall health. Gradual progress is normal. Regular check-ins help keep the programme calibrated to where you actually are.
This Isn't Something You Can DIY
There's no shortage of balance exercises online. Some are harmless. But VRT isn't a playlist of exercises — it's a clinical process.
Before any exercise is prescribed, the cause of the symptoms needs to be understood. Inner ear problem? Brain-related? Visual system? A mix? Each of these needs a different approach. Treating them the same way doesn't work and can sometimes make things worse.
This matters even more when the underlying issue is neurological. A stroke, MS, a brain injury — these aren't conditions where a generic balance programme is appropriate. Getting the diagnosis right is half the work.
When to Seek Care
Seek medical care if you notice any of the following.
Early evaluation helps identify the cause and guide treatment.
Dr Prabash's Approach
Dr Prabash's practice focuses on vertigo, dizziness, and balance disorders. Every patient starts with a thorough neurological assessment — the goal being to understand exactly what's causing the symptoms before anything else.
From there, the rehabilitation plan reflects the individual: their diagnosis, their lifestyle, what they're trying to get back to. The measure of success isn't just fewer symptoms. It's restored confidence, better mobility, and a meaningful improvement in day-to-day life.
FAQs
Before Your First Appointment
Coming in prepared makes the whole consultation more useful. Here's what to think about:
Your symptoms
When did things start? What triggers them? How long do episodes last? Any falls or near-falls worth mentioning?
Medical history
Previous ear problems, neurological conditions, injuries, anything relevant in the family history.
Medications
Everything, including supplements. Some medications affect balance and it's useful to know.
Questions you want answered
Write them down. It's easy to forget once you're in the room.
Anything else relevant
The history you give is often more telling than any test. The clearer the picture you can paint of what you're experiencing, the faster we can get to what's actually going on.