Vestibular disorders may refer to ear vestibular dysfunction, and its rehabilitation training methods include head training, gaze training, positional training and posture training. 1. Head training: you can alternately perform slow head-down and head-up movements, or turn your head left and right alternately, or tilt your head from one shoulder to the other for exercise, following the principle of first slow and then fast in the process. 2. Gaze training: the eyes of the trainee move in the order of up, down, left and right. Gaze training can also be accomplished by gazing at a stationary target while the head is moving. 3. Positional training: the trainee sits on a stool and bends forward to try to pick up an object on the floor; or turns his/her head to one side while bending and then to the other side to complete the positional training. It is also possible to turn the whole body from one side to the other while lying down, or to switch from a lying to a sitting position; 4. Posture training: you can stand on one foot, or find a support point and then walk in a circle, or you can fix some obstacles and then walk around them. In addition, it can be accompanied by touching one’s toes with one’s fingers, or performing exercises such as bending and twisting. The syndrome can be manifested as dizziness, vertigo and balance disorder. The symptoms of generalized functional incoordination can generally be improved to some extent by long-term training, alternating head training, gaze training, positional training, and postural training. The patient should actively seek medical treatment, and complete the training content according to the doctor’s instructions on the basis of treating the primary disease.