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RecruitingNCT04791748

Virtual Reality in Children With and Without Vestibular Deficits

Validation and Comparison of a Virtual Reality Protocol in Children Without Vestibular Pathology and Children With Chronic Vestibular déficits : Prospective Study ReViCHILD

Status
Recruiting
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
140 (estimated)
Sponsor
Assistance Publique - Hôpitaux de Paris · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
7 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Vestibular information is important in establishing a child's static and dynamic postural control. Any vestibular deficit can have major consequences on development, spatial cognition and quality of life. In order to interact with the world around us, we must simultaneously integrate different sources of sensory informations (vision, hearing, perception of the body...). The brain integrates these different sensory components to form a unified and coherent perception: this is multisensory integration. Multisensory integration has been studied using virtual reality in adults, in the "spatial orientation" team of the Center for Integrative Neurosciences and Cognition. These experiments were carried out on healthy subjects and in weightless situations (international space station or parabolic flight). However, no protocol has been developed in children or in subjects with vestibular deficit. Virtual reality is interesting for developing such a protocol because it creates multisensory stimulation capable of promoting visual and proprioceptive compensation of the vestibular deficit. It induces an immersion of the patient in a virtual spatial and temporal environment difficult to carry out with traditional vestibular rehabilitation techniques. Its main advantage is that it is a fun and safe interactive diagnostic and therapeutic tool, which is particularly suitable for children. Being able to modulate certain sensory information using virtual reality, in children without vestibular function deficit and in children with vestibular function deficit, will make it possible to better understand the role of the vestibule in the construction of the self in relation to space and environment. In addition to the scientific aspect, the diagnostic and therapeutic benefits are potentially numerous. The objective of the study is to determine a reliable, well-tolerated and age-appropriate virtual reality protocol in children without vestibular deficit and in children with chronic vestibular deficit, making it possible to study the hand-eye coordination.

Detailed description

Vestibular information is important in establishing a child's static and dynamic postural control. Any vestibular deficit can have major consequences on development, spatial cognition and quality of life. In order to interact with the world around us, we must simultaneously integrate different sources of sensory informations (vision, hearing, perception of the body ...). The brain integrates these different sensory components to form a unified and coherent perception: this is multisensory integration. It is particularly important in children for the acquisition of sitting, standing and then walking. When a congenital vestibular deficit exists, adaptive behaviors using visual and proprioceptive inputs are set up. Multisensory integration has been studied using virtual reality in adults, in the "spatial orientation" team of the Center for Integrative Neurosciences and Cognition. These experiments were carried out on healthy subjects and in weightless situations (international space station or parabolic flight). However, no protocol has been developed in children or in subjects with vestibular deficit. Virtual reality is interesting for developing such a protocol because it creates multisensory stimulation capable of promoting visual and proprioceptive compensation of the vestibular deficit. It induces an immersion of the patient in a virtual spatial and temporal environment difficult to carry out with traditional vestibular rehabilitation techniques. Its main advantage is that it is a fun and safe interactive diagnostic and therapeutic tool, which is particularly suitable for children. Being able to modulate certain sensory information using virtual reality, in children without vestibular function deficit and in children with vestibular function deficit, will make it possible to better understand the role of the vestibule in the construction of the self in relation to space and environment. In addition to the scientific aspect, the diagnostic and therapeutic benefits are potentially numerous. The objective of the study is to determine a reliable, well-tolerated and age-appropriate virtual reality protocol in children without vestibular deficit and in children with chronic vestibular deficit, making it possible to study the hand-eye coordination.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DIAGNOSTIC_TESTVestibular testsScreening vestibular test for patients without chronic vestibular deficits Complete vestibular test if not done yet in care of patients with chronic vestibular deficits
OTHERVirtual realityVirtual reality protocol : doing tasks involving hand-eye coordination, in virtual reality, and in different sensory situations

Timeline

Start date
2021-04-12
Primary completion
2027-02-01
Completion
2027-02-01
First posted
2021-03-10
Last updated
2026-04-03

Locations

1 site across 1 country: France

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT04791748. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.

Virtual Reality in Children With and Without Vestibular Deficits (NCT04791748) · Clinical Trials Directory