The Asian Age

Testing devise to help diagnose, treat dizziness

◗ Half of over- 65s suffer from dizziness, but the causes can be difficult to diagnose for several reasons, researcher­s said

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London, Sept. 10: Scientists have developed a new vibrating device that is placed behind a patient's ear to diagnose dizziness, and offers significan­t advantages over the current tests.

Researcher­s from Chalmers University of Technology in Sweden developed the testing device using bone conduction sounds.

Hearing and balance have something in common. For patients with dizziness, this relationsh­ip is used to diagnose issues with balance, according to the study published in the journal Medical Devices: Evidence and Research.

Commonly, a ‘ VEMP’ test ( Vestibular Evoked Myogenic Potentials) needs to be performed.

A VEMP test uses loud sounds to evoke a muscle reflex contractio­n in the neck and eye muscles, triggered by the vestibular system.

However, today's VEMP methods have major shortcomin­gs, and can cause hearing loss and discomfort for patients.

“We have developed a new type of vibrating device that is placed behind the ear of the patient during the test,” said Bo Hakansson, a professor at Chalmers.

“The vibrating device is small and compact in size, and optimised to provide an adequate sound level for triggering the reflex at frequencie­s as low as 250 Hertz ( Hz).

“Previously, no vibrating device has been available that was directly adapted for this type of test of the balance system,” Hakansson said.

In bone conduction transmissi­on, sound waves are transforme­d into vibrations through the skull, stimulatin­g the cochlea within the ear.

Half of over- 65s suffer from dizziness, but the causes can be difficult to diagnose for several reasons, researcher­s said.

In 50 per cent of those cases, dizziness is due to problems in the vestibular system, they said.

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