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Tinnitus
Tinnitus is the perception of sound originating from within the head rather than from the external world. Can be divided into two main types:
- Objective; there is actually a noise to be heard being generated within the head.
These are either:- Pulsatile; due to movement of blood, e.g. carotid stenosis, vascular anomalies or tumours, valvular heart disease, high cardiac output states.
- Muscular or anatomical; palatal myoclonus, spasm of tympanic muscles, patulous eustachian tube.
- Spontaneous; otoacoustic emissions.
- Subjective; there is no acoustic stimulus.
Common causes are:- Otological; noise-induced and other forms of hearing loss, presbycusis, otosclerosis, impacted cerumen, ear infection, Meniere's disease.
- Neurological; head injury, multiple sclerosis, acoustic neuroma and other similar tumours.
- Infectious; meningitis, syphilis.
- Drug related; salicylates, NSAIDs, aminoglycosides, loop diuretics, cytotoxicity.
- Jaw disorders; temporomandibular-joint dysfunction.
This is a common complaint. The British Tinnitus Association estimates 1 in 10 people suffer from this symptom.1 It is more common in males.
Symptoms
Patients often take a long time before seeking medical attention.
Commonest sounds are:
- Ringing
- Buzzing
- Cricket-like
- Hissing
- Whistling
- Humming
Condition is reported to be unilateral in 22%, equal in both ears 34% and one side dominant in the rest, usually the left.2
- Thorough examination of head and neck, ears, jaw
- Hearing test
- Other examinations suggested by clinical findings
Although patients report sound as being loud, hearing tests demonstrate that they are at an intensity that is only just louder than the softest sound audible at that frequency usually above 3KHz.
Exclude an acoustic neuroma in unilateral tinnitus.
Non-Drug
- Explanation and reassurance that will not progress and no sinister findings.
- There is a strong association between tinnitus and stress; relaxation techniques or relaxing background music can distract or mask some tinnitus.
- Tinnitus retraining therapy shows improvement in 75-82% of patients. It links negative emotional associations with tinnitus-related neural activity.3,4
- Can take over a year to complete with a goal of habituating the patient to the tinnitus rather than abolishing it.
- Masking devices can be used in those patients who obtained relief from masking during the hearing test. Tinnitus maskers create and deliver constant low-level white noise to the ear. Patients should be advised to wear the device during their waking hours, but successful wearers may wear the device while sleeping.5
Drugs
- Consider antidepressants for associated depression.
- SSRIs have been shown to significantly reduce tinnitus severity, as well as anxiety and depression symptoms.6
Surgical
Document References
- Luxon LM. Tinnitus: its causes, diagnosis, and treatment. BMJ; June 1993
- Axelsson A, Ringdahl A; Tinnitus--a study of its prevalence and characteristics. Br J Audiol. 1989 Feb;23(1):53-62. [abstract]
- Berry JA, Gold SL, Frederick EA, et al; Patient-based outcomes in patients with primary tinnitus undergoing tinnitus retraining therapy. Arch Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg. 2002 Oct;128(10):1153-7. [abstract]
- Herraiz C, Hernandez FJ, Plaza G, et al; Long-term clinical trial of tinnitus retraining therapy. Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg. 2005 Nov;133(5):774-9. [abstract]
- Folmer RL, Carroll JR; Long-term effectiveness of ear-level devices for tinnitus. Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg. 2006 Jan;134(1):132-137. [abstract]
- Zoger S, Svedlund J, Holgers KM; The effects of sertraline on severe tinnitus suffering--a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study. J Clin Psychopharmacol. 2006 Feb;26(1):32-9. [abstract]
- Vasama JP, Moller MB, Moller AR; Microvascular decompression of the cochlear nerve in patients with severe tinnitus. Preoperative findings and operative outcome in 22 patients. Neurol Res. 1998 Apr;20(3):242-8. [abstract]
- De Ridder D, Ryu H, De Mulder G, et al; Frequency specific hearing improvement in microvascular decompression of the cochlear nerve. Acta Neurochir (Wien). 2005 May;147(5):495-501; discusssion 501. Epub 2005 [abstract]
Internet and Further Reading
- The British Tinnitus Association
- AG Benson and WK Robbins. Inner Ear, Tinnitus. eMedicine. Article dated November 28 2006
DocID: 2873
Document Version: 21
DocRef: bgp939
Last Updated: 3 Jul 2007
Review Date: 2 Jul 2009
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