Hi:
I have been a doctor of Bio-Engineering working in the health field since 1970. I had Gamma Knife surgery in 2001 for my vestibular schwannoma, reducing it by 32%. My balance was destroyed after surgery and I had constant severe eye and cerebellum pain for many months; not from the surgery, but from my lack of balance. In that time, I figured that since my left inner ear was compromised, giving my cerebellum false information, that if I could "reset" my cerebellum, I could regain my balance...it worked. It took many weeks of doing these semicircular canal exercises daily, until I started noticing progress. Today, I only need to do these exercises once or twice a month to keep my cerebellum happy. Today, I don't have balance problems, as long as I do these exercises.
Our 6th sense, our somatosensory system, coordinates all of our body functions, especially balance, and the cerebellum is the key to its health. When the cerebellum is out of wack, there is a lot of static in your brain that produces "senior moments"...at any age. By resetting your cerebellum, this static is removed and memory returns...I have proven this with myself and senior friends who were having too many senior moments. In the past, when I was a part of this forum, I noticed that many young people with acoustic neuromas were having memory problems; it has nothing to do with age, it has to do with a somatosensory system that needs attention by resetting the cerebellum.
If you want a a PDF of the exercises, email me.
Thank you,
Dr. Dino