By Dr. Prateek Porwal, ENT & Vertigo Specialist | Prime ENT Center, Hardoi
Last Updated: February 2026 | VAI Budapest 2025 Award Recipient

If I had to pick one single intervention that helps the most vertigo patients recover, it’s vestibular rehabilitation therapy (VRT). Not medication. Not fancy imaging. Simple, targeted exercises that teach your brain to compensate. I see patients week after week do these exercises and gradually reclaim their livesgetting back to work, climbing stairs without fear, going shopping alone.

In my practice across Uttar Pradesh, I’ve treated thousands of patients with balance disorders. The ones who recover fastest aren’t those who rest in bed or take pills indefinitely. They’re the ones who understand how their balance system works and actively retrain it. That’s what VRT does.

What Vestibular Rehabilitation Therapy Actually Does

The Three Core Mechanisms of VRT Recovery

1. Adaptation (Retuning the Vestibular System)

Adaptation is the brain’s ability to adjust its response to a compromised vestibular signal. If your left ear is damaged, it keeps sending wrong signals. But your brain can learn to ignore those faulty signals and rely more on your right ear, your eyes, and your body position sense. Over time, the bad signal becomes less important to your balance calculation.

This is why exercises that engage both ears together are important. They help your brain figure out which signal to trust. The damaged system’s signals gradually get dampened in the brain’s priority hierarchy.

2. Substitution (Other Systems Taking Over)

Your visual system can compensate for a damaged vestibular system. Your proprioceptive system (feeling where your body is in space) can also take over. VRT exercises specifically train these backup systems to work better. This is why gaze stabilization exercises are so powerfulthey’re training your eyes to do some of the work your inner ear normally does.

I explain it to patients like this: They’re always there, but usually they don’t need to work at full capacity. VRT puts them through training to work at peak performance when needed.

3. Habituation (Getting Used to Triggering Movements)

Habituation is the most counter-intuitive principle of VRT but often the most effective. When a movement triggers your vertigo, your natural instinct is to avoid that movement. But avoiding it means your brain never learns to handle it. Habituation exercises deliberately expose you to the movements that cause dizziness, but in controlled, gradually increasing doses.

With repeated exposure, something remarkable happens: your brain stops treating that movement as a threat. The dizziness response diminishes. You might feel 80% dizzy on the first attempt, 60% on the third, 40% by the tenth. Eventually, the movement no longer triggers vertigo at all. This is habituation in action.

Vestibular Rehabilitation Therapy

The Three Types of Vestibular Rehabilitation Therapy Exercises Explained in Detail

Gaze Stabilization (Vestibulo-Ocular Reflex Training)

Your eyes should stay fixed on a target while your head moves. This stabilization is controlled by something called the vestibulo-ocular reflex (VOR). When your inner ear is damaged, this reflex becomes impaired. Your eyes drift instead of staying locked on target, and that’s when you experience oscillopsiathe feeling that the world is bouncing or jiggling when you move your head.

Gaze stabilization exercises retrain this reflex. The principle is simple: fixate on a point, then turn your head side-to-side while keeping your eyes locked on that point. As your vestibular system compensates, the muscles controlling your eye movements become more responsive. Over weeks, your eyes track better, and the oscillopsia improves.

I teach patients a practical progression:

The goal is to gradually increase the challenge, forcing your brain to adapt and strengthen the eye-head coordination system.

Balance Training (Postural Stability and Proprioceptive Enhancement)

Balance training progressively challenges your body’s ability to maintain equilibrium. It starts simple and gradually increases difficulty as your system adapts.

The progression usually follows this pattern:

  1. Level 1 (Easiest): Stand on both feet with eyes open. Maintain balance for 30-60 seconds. This engages proprioception and vestibular input
  2. Level 2: Same position but eyes closed. Now proprioception has to work harder because visual input is gone
  3. Level 3: Stand on one leg with eyes open. Single-leg stance forces stronger proprioceptive compensation
  4. Level 4: Stand on one leg with eyes closed. Maximum proprioceptive challenge
  5. Level 5: Stand on a soft surface (pillow or foam pad) with eyes open. An unstable surface requires faster vestibular and proprioceptive responses
  6. Level 6: Soft surface with eyes closed. Very challenging; don’t attempt without support nearby
  7. Level 7: Dynamic activitieswalking while turning your head, walking in straight lines with eyes closed, tandem walking (heel-to-toe), turning in circles
  8. Level 8: Marching in place while focusing on a target, picking up objects from teh ground while maintaining balance, walking while looking up or down

I usually have patients practice 1-2 minutes at each level before progressing. There’s no need to rush. The key is consistencydoing these exercises daily builds stronger neural connections.

Habituation Exercises (Systematic Desensitization)

Habituation exercises deliberately trigger small amounts of dizziness by repeating the movements that cause it. This seems counterintuitivewhy make yourself dizzy?but it’s powerful because habituation is how the brain stops treating a stimulus as threatening.

Common habituation exercises include:

The key principle: you want to trigger mild dizziness (3-4 out of 10 severity), not severe dizziness (8-10 out of 10). Mild dizziness allows habituation. Severe dizziness is counterproductive and scary. Once you trigger mild dizziness with an exercise, repeat it 5-10 times in a session. The response typically dampens across those repetitions.

Who Benefits Most From VRT and Who Doesn’t

Conditions That Respond Excellently to VRT

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