Vestibular Care
Dizziness & Balance Issues
Dizziness, vertigo, and imbalance are treatable. We use specialist diagnostic tools — including videonystagmoscopy and head-impulse testing — to identify exactly what is driving your symptoms, then build a targeted vestibular rehabilitation plan around that diagnosis.
Advanced diagnostics
Get the Right Diagnosis
Dizziness has many causes. Our full diagnostic suite pinpoints which one — so treatment is targeted, not trial-and-error.
Book Your Initial AssessmentWhatsApp UsUnderstanding the Condition
Conditions We Treat
BPPV
Benign paroxysmal positional vertigo. Usually resolved in 1–3 sessions with specific repositioning manoeuvres like the Epley.
Vestibular Neuritis
Inflammation of the vestibular nerve. Targeted rehabilitation restores balance and gaze stability over a few weeks.
Post-Concussion Dizziness
Persistent dizziness and imbalance after head injury. Specific cervical, vestibular and oculomotor protocols work well.
Persistent Postural Perceptual Dizziness
PPPD — chronic non-specific dizziness with a strong evidence base for graded vestibular rehabilitation.
Vestibular Hypofunction
One or both inner-ear balance systems underperforming. Rehab trains compensation and gaze stability.
Balance Disorders in Older Adults
Falls-prevention focus combining targeted balance, strength, and confidence training.
How we treat it
The KINETIKA Approach
Videonystagmoscopy, head-impulse test, and clinical balance testing identify which vestibular system is involved before we start treatment.
For BPPV and cervicogenic causes — Epley/Semont manoeuvres and upper-cervical manual therapy where indicated.
Gaze-stability, habituation, and balance exercises dosed to your symptom threshold and progressed deliberately.
Falls-prevention strategies, return-to-driving guidance, and return-to-sport protocols for those who need them.

Take the next step
Book Your Initial Assessment
Most dizziness is treatable once it is properly diagnosed. We will work out what is driving your symptoms and build a clear plan to settle them.
No referral · Same-week appointments · Dubai Hills
Common questions
Frequently Asked Questions
BPPV is caused by tiny crystals becoming dislodged in the inner ear. It is the most common cause of vertigo and usually resolves in 1–3 sessions with specific repositioning manoeuvres (such as the Epley).
Some exercises can briefly provoke symptoms while your brain adapts — that is part of how rehabilitation works. We progress carefully so you stay in a tolerable range and symptoms reduce over time.
No. You can book directly. If we identify something that needs a neurologist or ENT specialist, we will refer you and coordinate care.
Highly variable. BPPV often resolves in 1–3 sessions. Vestibular neuritis or more complex presentations may need 6–12 weeks of rehabilitation. We will give you a realistic estimate at the first session.