Friday, January 20, 2006

Balance Center Introduces New Technology

Last May, Theresa Devereux of New York Mills suffered from a loss of hearing after an 18-hour coma caused by Bacterial Streptococcal Pneumococcal Meningitis. At the age of 47, this once active and healthy woman was faced with not only deafness but severe balance problems leaving her unable to walk or care for herself.Devereux called on The Balance Center at Faxton-St. Luke’s Healthcare to help her “return to the person” she was before the coma. “On my first visit to the Center I was in a wheelchair. After only a few weeks of therapy, I was able to walk into the building and up to the Balance Center on my own,” she said.The Balance Center, which is part of the Regional Rehabilitation Center, provides the Mohawk Valley with the only state-of-the art equipment and a highly trained occupational therapist, Kim Bywater, O.T.R./L. who specializes in problems relating to balance and equilibrium. Bywater, who received her certificate in clinical competency in Vestibular Rehabilitation from Emory University in Atlanta, is able to perform a comprehensive evaluation of patients with dizziness or balance complaints. Recently, the Center installed the NeuroCom Smart EquiTest, representing the most advanced balance and mobility assessment and treatment equipment available.When patients like Devereux first visit The Balance Center, they are assessed based on three different senses: equilibrium from the inner ear, visual input, and sensory input from one’s muscles and joints. “The computer measures how well you use the input from all three areas,” Bywater explained.Following the initial assessment, the EquiTest is then used to train the patient how to balance or compensate for a loss they may have in one of the areas. Patients usually visit the center two to three times a week for up to two months for treatment and need a doctor’s referral, Bywater said.For Devereux, the loss of hearing and brain trauma from the meningitis added challenges to being balanced. “Kim had various physical exercises, as well as vision exercises that I practiced at therapy and at home,” she said. “Kim inspired me to work hard, to have faith that I would make progress, and in the end, I found a good friend. A good friend and therapist who credits the EquiTest. This equipment objectively measures the balance, or lack of, and then provides training with instant feedback, which is displayed on a computer screen to guide and prompt patients during rehabilitation.And although Devereux said she still has a long road to recovery, she said The Balance Center staff and technology gave her back a chance at having a normal life again through not only the physical help, but the emotional support.For more information about the Balance Center at Faxton-St. Luke’s Healthcare, please call 624-5400 or visit us on the web at http://www.faxtonstlukes.com/.###