
BACKGROUND/OBJECTIVE: There exists limited information in the literature on dominant hand preference in relation with vHIT applications. The present study aimed to examine the relationship between the clinician’s dominant use of right- or left-hand and vHIT results. METHODS: A Synapsys vHIT Ulmer device was used in the study. The tests were administered by 3 clinicians experienced in vHIT, 2 of whom were right-handed and 1 left-handed. The test was applied to the 94 participants three times, one week apart. RESULTS: In this study, the correlation between right-handed clinicians and left-handed clinicians was examined, and in all SCCs, namely RA, LA, RL, LL, RP and LP, a moderate positive significant correlation was found between right-handed1 and right-handed2, between right-handed1 and left-handed, and between right-handed2 and left-handed. CONCLUSIONS: In this study, these findings suggested that measures were reliable across test sessions regardless of hand dominancy (right or left). Based on the vHIT results we obtained with three different right- or left-handed clinicians, the clinician should evaluate the results according to the dominant side.
Test-Retest Reliability, video head impulse test, Reflex, Vestibulo-Ocular, right-hand dominance, left-hand dominance, Semicircular Canals, Chromosome Pairing, vestibulo-ocular reflex, Normative Data, Hand-dominance, Humans, Head Impulse Test
Test-Retest Reliability, video head impulse test, Reflex, Vestibulo-Ocular, right-hand dominance, left-hand dominance, Semicircular Canals, Chromosome Pairing, vestibulo-ocular reflex, Normative Data, Hand-dominance, Humans, Head Impulse Test
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