690 likes | 784 Views
Tinnitus Diagnosis and Treatment. Hossein Talebi; PhD of Audiology Assistant Professor of Audiology Isfahan University of Medical Sciences. Introduction . Tinnitus is defined as sensations of hearing in the absence of external sounds. The burden of tinnitus. Introduction.
E N D
Tinnitus Diagnosis and Treatment Hossein Talebi; PhD of Audiology Assistant Professor of Audiology Isfahan University of Medical Sciences
Introduction • Tinnitus is defined as sensations of hearing in the absence of external sounds
Introduction • Prevalence increases with age • 80% of people don’t seek help • 6-8% of those affected are severe • 40% of patients experience depression • Can vary between barely perceptible noise to a deafening roar • Very little is understood about its cause or cure
Tinnitus sufferers • Ludwig van Beethoven • Vincent van Gogh • Charles Darwin • Neil Young • Eric Clapton • Ronald Regan
Types of Tinnitus • Objective: caused by sounds generated somewhere in the body • Subjective: perception of meaningless sounds without any physical sound being present • Auditory hallucinations: perceptions of meaningful sounds such as music or speech
Effects of Tinnitus • Concentration • Hearing • Insomnia • Psychological
Pathophysiology • Poorly understood • Range of theories from loss of outer hair cell function to increased spontaneous activity of central nerves • Can be generated from any part of the auditory system from the ear to the Central Nervous System (CNS) • This then may become modified by the CNS
Brain response to auditory deprivation DECREASED SOUND INPUT • Patients with tinnitus exhibit enhanced auditory sensitivity • This is caused by hyperactivity of the auditory central nervous system • In patients with tinnitus and hearing loss, the tinnitus pitch and the hearing loss frequency spectrum are usually matched INCREASED SOUND SENSITIVITY
Tinnitus is a balance of sensory input and spontaneous activity • The decreased input from the cochlea, due to outer hair cell damage, results in readjustments in the central auditory system resulting in abnormal neural activity including hyperactivity, bursting discharges and increases in neural synchrony. AUDITORY DEPRIVATION AND CENTRAL GAIN ALTERED SPONTANEOUS NEURONAL ACTIVITY TINNITUS
Pathophysiology • When the perception of tinnitus is associated with negative reinforcement, the autonomic nervous system is activated. • Physiological and psychological reactions then lead to enhancement of the tinnitus signal • Often compared with chronic pain
A Team Approach • Thorough evaluation to rule out significant pathology • Treatment of other ear disorders eg. infection • Explanation of test results • Explanation of tinnitus mechanisms • Treatment options • Treatment of severe psychological disorders • Follow-up
Differential Diagnosis • Idiopathic (most common) • Outer ear disease • Wax, foreign body, infection • Middle ear disease • Infection, perforated eardrum, ossicular problems, tumour
Differential Diagnosis • Inner ear disease • Presbyacusis (older age hearing loss) • Meniere’s disease • Acoustic neuroma • Noise exposure • Drugs
Evaluation of Tinnitus • Thorough history • Duration, nature, effects • Non vs. pulsatile • Noise exposure • Other ear symptoms • Ear examination • Rule out outer/middle ear disease • Tuning fork tests
Evaluation of Tinnitus • Audiological (hearing) Tests • Audiogram, tympanogram • Specialized hearing tests: SOAE, ECochG, ABR • MRI • Associated symptoms • Asymmetric hearing loss
Evaluation - Subjective Tinnitus • Audiometry - assymetrical hearing loss, unilateral tinnitus - MRI r/o post fossa • Complete questionnaire for perceived severity:THI
Measurement of Tinnitus • Pitch, loudness, minimum masking level, residual inhibition/post masking • Minimum masking level most clinical use • Pitch - match most prominent pure tone, poor reliability, octave difference • Loudness - Adjust pure tone to tinnitus • Most < 7 dB SL, may be 2 dB
Measurement of Tinnitus • Minimal masking level - number of decibels to cover tinnitus • Residual inhibition - response of patients tinnitus post masking
ENT Referral ENT Referral
Treatment • Aim to improve habituation rather than “cure” tinnitus • Most people don’t seek treatment • Multitude of potential treatments • Problems with scientific evidence
Treatment • Basic advice • Hearing Aid • Tinnitus Masking Device • Tinnitus Instrument • Tinnitus Retraining Therapy • Psychological Treatment • Medication • Alternative Treatments
Basic Advice • Reassurance • The first step is to understand the problem • Avoid aggravating factors eg. noise, NSAIDs • Decreased intake of stimulants eg. caffeine and nicotine • Relaxation • Avoiding silence • White noise eg. Detuned radio
Treatment • Basic advice • Hearing Aid • Tinnitus Masking Device • Tinnitus Instrument • Tinnitus Retraining Therapy • Psychological Treatment • Medication • Alternative Treatments
Hearing Aids • Essentially for poor hearing • Increases ambient noise • Decreases stress of poor hearing • Various shapes and sizes • Cost • Limitations • Up to 90% may benefit
Hearing aids are central to tinnitus management • Reports of the use of hearing aids in the management of tinnitus go back over 60 years • Because hearing loss is often associated with tinnitus, at least partial restoration of hearing should help to reduce the central gain in auditory perception that is a feature of tinnitus • A recent scoping review of studies of hearing aids in tinnitus revealed that 17/18 publications showed improvements in tinnitus symptoms by fitting hearing aids
Treatment • Basic advice • Hearing Aid • Tinnitus Masking Device • Tinnitus Instrument • Tinnitus Retraining Therapy • Psychological Treatment • Medication • Alternative Treatments
Tinnitus Masking Device • Essentially counteracts tinnitus • Generate noise bands • Tinnitus Instruments • Combination of hearing aid and masker
Wide Band Noise Generators • Emit ‘white noise’ • Elimination of silence • White noise boring: tendency to ignore • Gives the tinnitus sufferer something tangible to work with • Reduce the starkness of the tinnitus signal
Treatment • Basic advice • Hearing Aid • Tinnitus Masking Device • Tinnitus Instrument • Tinnitus Retraining Therapy • Psychological Treatment • Medication • Alternative Treatments
Tinnitus Retraining Therapy • Based on evidence that a person can habituate to acoustic noise in the environment • Goal is to weaken or remove the functional connections between the auditory pathways • Key elements: counseling and sound therapy