PAULA SLADDIN PSYCHOLOGIST AND MINDFULNESS TEACHER
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Written by Paula Sladdin - Psychologist AAPi

How Vestibular Physiotherapist can help symptoms of POTS

2/9/2026

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As a psychologist, I often work with clients who live with Postural Orthostatic Tachycardia Syndrome (POTS) and the emotional toll that comes with feeling fatigue, dizziness, brain fog, anxiety, and the frustration of feeling limited in daily life. What many people don’t realise is how powerful vestibular physiotherapy can be as part of a truly holistic approach to managing POTS symptoms.
POTS affects the autonomic nervous system, which plays a key role in heart rate, blood pressure, and balance. When this system is dysregulated, the brain can receive confusing signals about movement, position, and safety. Over time, this can heighten symptoms like dizziness, unsteadiness, visual disturbance, nausea, and even panic. From a psychological perspective, repeated experiences of feeling unsafe in your body can understandably increase anxiety, hypervigilance, and avoidance of movement.
This is where a vestibular physiotherapist becomes incredibly valuable.
Vestibular physios are trained to assess how the brain, inner ear, eyes, and body communicate about balance and motion. For clients with POTS, they can design gentle, graded exercises that help retrain these systems without overwhelming the nervous system. Rather than pushing through symptoms, the focus is on restoring trust in the body at a pace that feels safe and achievable.
Clinically, I see several benefits when clients work with a vestibular physio:
  • Reduced dizziness and motion sensitivity
  • Improved tolerance to upright posture and movement
  • Less fear around standing, walking, or leaving the house
  • Greater confidence in daily activities
From a psychological standpoint, this physical progress often leads to reduced anxiety, improved mood, and a stronger sense of agency. When the body feels more predictable, the mind can relax.
Importantly, vestibular physiotherapy aligns beautifully with psychological work. While I help clients understand the stress response, process grief or trauma, and build coping strategies, the physio supports the bottom-up regulation of the nervous system. Together, this mind–body approach reinforces recovery rather than treating symptoms in isolation.
For anyone living with POTS, collaboration between psychology, vestibular physiotherapy, and medical care can be life changing. You deserve support that recognises your symptoms as real, complex, and treatable—and that helps you feel safe in your body again.
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    Paula Sladdin
    Psychologist with a special interest in chronic health conditions.

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