Robert W. Sweetow, Ph.D.

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Robert W. Sweetow, Ph.D.

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Title: Robert W. Sweetow, Ph.D.


1
Tinnitus Patient Management
  • Robert W. Sweetow, Ph.D.
  • University of California
  • San Francisco, California

2
Some questions you need to consider
  • How much time does it take?
  • Is this worth my time?
  • How much will it cost me? (time, money, emotions)
  • How do I get reimbursed?
  • My very first case

3
Possible Mechanisms
  • Abnormal rhythm or rate of spontaneous 8th nerve
    discharges
  • Increased spontaneous activity in dorsal cochlear
    nucleus resulting from reduced peripheral input
  • Unlike spontaneous activity, these neural
    discharges may become phasic and correlated

4
Proposed Mechanisms
  • Imbalance of afferent and efferent
  • Deficient afferent neurotransmitter glutamate at
    the cochlear-8th nerve synapse
  • disinhibition from neurotransmitters such as
    gamma aminobutyric acid (GABA)
  • Toxicity or imbalance of other of
    neurotransmitters
  • Ion channel regulation for excitability of
    neurons
  • Calcium induced changes in intra or extracellular
    processes (noise)
  • Vitamin B , zinc deficiencies?

5
Proposed mechanisms
  • Correlated activity across nerves by phase
    locking - ephaptic transmission
  • Extralemniscal neurons, particularly in dorsal
    cochlear nucleus and AII area, receiving input
    from somasthetic system
  • over-representation of edge-frequencies (neural
    plasticity)
  • Increased activity in one hemisphere (right OR
    left, but not both, as occurs during sound
    stimulation)
  • Enhanced perception hypothesis
  • Sensory remodeling in the central auditory system
  • Association with fear and threat (limbic system)

6
Tinnitus and Hearing Loss
7
Correlation between tinnitus severity and
auditory threshold
Tsai, Cheung, and Sweetow, 2007
8
  • Models based on peripheral measures fail to
    predict completely percept laterality
  • Role of CNS adaptation (neural plasticity)
  • Absolute and relative depth of hearing loss are
    uncorrelated to percept severity
  • Role of CNS emotional binding (limbic system)

Tsai, Cheung, and Sweetow, 2007
9
  • Subjective tinnitus idiopathic sensory
    neural central
  • Objective tinnitus vascular muscular

10
Some outer and middle ear pathologies associated
with tinnitus
  • cholesteotoma mastoiditis
  • otosclerosis otitis media
  • impacted cerumen allergies
  • palatal myoclonus head/ear trauma
  • patulous eustachian tube
  • glomus jugulare tumor
  • abnormal middle ear resonance

11
Some inner ear pathologies associated with
tinnitus
  • acoustic trauma presbycusis
  • noise exposure menieres disease
  • labyrinthitis acoustic neuroma
  • head/ear trauma ototoxicity
  • meningitis perilymph fistula
  • autoimmune inner ear disease
  • vestibular schwannoma
  • sudden hearing loss

12
Some central auditory nervous system pathologies
associated with tinnitus
  • vascular
  • dementia
  • cardiovascular disease/hypertension
  • blood disease /anemia
  • multiple sclerosis

13
Other factors associated with tinnitus
  • temporomandibular disorders
  • cervical misalignment
  • menses/menopause
  • renal disease / Alports / kidney transplants
  • lyme disease
  • zinc deficiency
  • poor circulation
  • Hypothyroid/ hyperthyroid disorders

14
Results Summary
  • Tinnitus Percept Laterality is captured by Model
    2 ( maximum difference for two consecutive
    frequencies) for 63 cases.
  • Tinnitus Percept Severity is uncorrelated to
    absolute or relative hearing loss.

Tsai, Cheung, and Sweetow, 2007
15
  • Models based on peripheral measures fail to
    predict completely percept laterality
  • Role of CNS adaptation (neural plasticity)
  • Absolute and relative depth of hearing loss are
    uncorrelated to percept severity
  • Role of CNS emotional binding (limbic system)

Tsai, Cheung, and Sweetow, 2007
16
Mechanisms Etiologies
  • Para-auditory structures (Tyler,1993)
  • Body continually produces noise that can be
    transmitted to the base of the skull.
  • Usually these noises are inaudible but the
    patient becomes aware of these noises for a
    variety of reasons
  • Vascular neoplasms, arteriovenous malformations,
    venous hum, TMJ syndrome, and muscle contraction
    tinnitus.

17
Para-auditory generation
  • Vascular neoplasms
  • Cochlea detects blood flow
  • Potentially serious prognosis--symptom of
    vascular disease
  • Management--generally surgical

18
Para-auditory generation
  • Arteriovenous malformations
  • Developmental abnormalities--microscopic channels
    may canalize rapidly and result in rapid
    enlargement with increasing tinnitus
  • Often characterized by pulsatile tinnitus and may
    include distortion of the face or neck and
    discoloration of the skin.
  • Pulsatile rate increases with increased heart rate

19
Para-auditory Generation
  • Venous hum
  • Low pitched hum arising from the neck of many
    children and some adults, particularly young
    women.
  • Has been attributed to the transverse process of
    the second cervical vertebra impinging on the
    jugular vein.
  • Turning head away from involved side decreases it

20
Para-auditory generation
  • Venous Hum
  • Benign Intracranial Hypertension
  • Obesity
  • Menstrual irregularities
  • Hypothyroidism
  • Hyperthyroidism
  • Anemia
  • Vitamin A or D Deficiency
  • Side Effect of Oral Contraceptives
  • Pregnancy and Postpartum

21
Para-auditory Generation
  • TMJ syndrome
  • The petro-tympanic fissure is traversed by the
    mandibular ligament (Pintos ligament), the
    chorda tympani, and the anterior tympanic
    artery...disruption of these structures with a
    change or misalignment of the jaw can cause
    tinnitus and other ear symptoms
  • Diagnosis
  • Management

22
Para-auditory Generation
  • Muscle contraction tinnitus
  • Synchronous contraction of many or most of the
    fibers of one or more middle ear or palatal
    muscles (palatal myoclonus), either voluntary or
    involuntary
  • Pulsatile (clicking) tinnitus that does not
    change with changes in heart rate during exercise
  • Management (botox injections)

23
Diagnostic Issues in Tinnitusa Neuro-otological
Perspective
  • Robert Aaron Levine, MD

24
Tinnitus - unilateral
  • Coarse intermittent sounds coincident with jaw or
    head movements
  • Typical of a foreign body (i.e. cerumen, water or
    other liquids, or a hair resting against the
    tympanic membrane)
  • Fluttering

25
Fluttering
  • Stapedius muscle contractions
  • If associated with facial movements, then
    stapedial contractions are likely cause
  • Commonly seen after recovery from Bells palsy
  • When affected side of face contracts, ipsilateral
    stapedius muscle also contracts (synkinesis) due
    to aberrant facial nerve regeneration.

26
Tinnitus - unilateral or non-lateralized
  • Pulsatile
  • Clicking
  • Autophony (echoing of the voice), or blowing
    tinnitus
  • Hallucinations (non-verbal, stereotyped
    repetitive)

27
Pulsatile
  • Determine whether it is related to cardiac cycle
    by comparing your silent count of patients
    cardiac pulse while patient is silently counting
    the pulsations of his/her tinnitus

28
Pulsatile - history
  • An association with headaches, blurring of
    vision, and menstrual irregularities in an obese
    woman is suspicious for benign intracranial
    hypertension.
  • Abrupt onset with unilateral neck or head pains
    suggests a carotid dissection.
  • Changes in tinnitus intensity with head turning
    suggests a venous source for the tinnitus from
    a source ipsilateral to the direction that
    decreases the tinnitus
  • If the patient can obliterate the tinnitus with
    localized pressure in the periauricular region
    then an emissary vein is probably accounting for
    the tinnitus.
  • An associated fluctuating hearing loss raises the
    possibility of microvascular compression of the
    auditory nerve causing the pulsatile tinnitus.
  • (Ohashi, Yasumura et al., 1992 Waldvogel,
    Mattle et al., 1998)

29
Pulsatile
  • MRI studies of patients with unilateral tinnitus
    can detect vascular compression of the auditory
    nerve on the asymptomatic side as frequently as
    on the symptomatic side
  • (Makins, Nikolopoulos et al., 1998)

30
Pulsatile physical exam
  • A crescent purple coloration to the tympanic
    membrane is diagnostic of a glomus jugulare
    tumor.
  • Otoscopic observation of a red mass behind the
    tympanic membrane is suggestive of an aberrant
    carotid artery, dehiscent jugular bulb, or
    vascular tumor.
  • A unilateral conductive hearing loss in
    association with ipsilateral pulsatile tinnitus
    and an otherwise normal exam may suggest
    otosclerosis, as does Schwartzes sign (red hue
    behind the tympanic membrane on otoscopy).
  • Detection of a bruit ipsilateral to the pulsatile
    tinnitus suggests that the tinnitus is from the
    same source as the bruit. The source of the bruit
    then must be sought.

31
Pulsatile physical exam
  • Obliteration or reduction in the intensity of the
    pulsatile tinnitus with ipsilateral jugular
    compression (light or moderate pressure below the
    angle of the jaw) implicates a venous source of
    the tinnitus whereas a decrease in the tinnitus
    with ipsilateral carotid compression implicates
    an arterial source arising from the carotid
    system.

32
Pulsatile - Diagnostic studies
  • Because high cardiac output states such as anemia
    or hyperthyroidism can cause pulsatile tinnitus
    (usually bilateral), all patients should have a
    thyroid profile and a hematocrit.
  • If a carotid lesion is suspected then either a
    duplex ultrasound study of the carotid or MRA
    should be performed.
  • If a retrotympanic mass is suspected, then a
    high-resolution contrast-enhanced CT scan of the
    temporal bones should be obtained. Otherwise, a
    contrast-enhanced MRI scan of the temporal bone
    and cranium should be obtained.
  • If all non-invasive imaging studies have been
    unremarkable and raised intracranial pressure has
    been ruled out, then cerebral angiography should
    be considered, because a dural arteriovenous
    malformation can sometimes go undetected by
    another diagnostic study.
  • Because significant, but rare, morbidity can
    occur with angiography, careful deliberation must
    be given to the decision to proceed with
    angiography.

33
Clicking
  • Relatively rare
  • Appears to be due to contractions of tensor
    tympani or the nasopharyngeal muscles controlling
    the patency of the Eustachian tube
  • It can sometimes be bilateral, in which case, it
    is usually associated with palatal myoclonus.
  • Often the clicking can be heard by the examiner
  • Sometimes acoustic impedance measurements have
    abnormalities that correspond

34
Autophony (echoing of the voice), or blowing
tinnitus
  • Patulous ipsilateral Eustachian tube
  • Confirmatory features include disappearance of
    their complaints when their head is in a
    dependent position and abnormally large changes
    in the tympanic membrane acoustic impedance with
    respirations.

35
Musical hallucinations
  • Occur in elderly patients (more commonly in
    women) with a longstanding progressive moderate
    to severe bilateral hearing loss.
  • The tunes can be vocal and/or instrumental.
  • While usually bilateral, can be unilateral even
    with a bilateral hearing loss.
  • Can be precipitated by new medication, and
    resolved when medication is stopped.

36
Auditory hallucinations
  • Differ from musical hallucinations in several
    respects
  • Usually abrupt in onset and associated with focal
    neurological findings due to a brainstem stroke
    or space occupying lesion
  • Brain imaging is required

37
Tinnitus quality
  • 85 of subjects reported having experienced
    another type of normal tinnitus namely
    transient (typically less than a minute).
  • Transient tinnitus follows exposure to loud
    sound.
  • About 55 of population report such tinnitus
    lasting minutes to days.

38
Always unilateral, may be with vestibular
symptoms
  • Menieres Syndrome
  • Perilymphatic fistula
  • Herpes Zoster Oticus (Ramsay-Hunt Syndrome)
  • Cerebellopontine angle tumors
  • Central nervous system caudal to trapezoid body
  • Sudden idiopathic hearing loss

39
Menieres Syndrome
  • While the tinnitus is often described as roaring
    early in the illness, with more advanced stages
    of the syndrome, the tinnitus tends to become
    more variable in its description.

40
Perilymphatic fistula
  • Tends to be high frequency (hissing, crickets,
    etc.) with no recovery.
  • The defect can be caused by barotrauma, head
    trauma, valsalva, or erosion of the bony
    labyrinth due to an inflammatory or neoplastic
    process, or following middle ear surgery, such as
    stapedectomy.
  • Diagnosis can be suggested by the fistula test
    the induction of nystagmus by positive or
    negative pressure applied to the external
    auditory canal.

41
Herpes Zoster Oticus (Ramsay-Hunt Syndrome)
  • Intense ear pain followed by ipsilateral
    tinnitus, hearing loss, vertigo and facial
    paralysis

42
Sudden idiopathic hearing loss
  • Always unilateral

43
Always with hearing loss,may be unilateral or
non-lateralized
  • Acute acoustic trauma
  • Chronic progressive hearing loss (presbycusis,
    chronic acoustic trauma, hereditary hearing loss)
  • Autoimmune inner ear disease

44
May be no hearing loss, may be unilateral, or
non-lateralized
  • Somatic (head or upper cervical)
  • Trauma
  • Post-infectious
  • Medication-related (including withdrawal
    syndromes)

45
Somatic (head or upper cervical)
  • Higher incidence of tinnitus in normal hearing
    subjects with temporomandibular joint syndrome
    than in controls (Chole and Parker, 1992)
  • The same is true regarding whiplash (Tjell,
    Tenenbaum et al., 1999)
  • Tinnitus temporally associated with unilateral
    somatic disorders are localized to the
    ipsilateral ear (Levine, 1999a)
  • The physical examination should include
  • Inspection of the teeth for evidence of bruxism,
    such as excessive wear of the bottom incisors
  • Palpation of the head and neck musculature for
    tender muscles under increased tension
  • Forceful systematic isometric concentration of
    muscle groups of the head and neck for their
    effects upon the patients tinnitus

46
Properties suggesting somatic component
  • Intermittency
  • Large fluctuations in loudness
  • Variability of location
  • Diurnal pattern
  • No hearing loss but head or neck trauma

47
Somatic Diurnal fluctuations
  • Suggest somatic modulation is operative
  • Tinnitus louder upon awakening raises the
    possibility that somatic factors (such as
    bruxism) are active during sleep and are causing
    an increase in tinnitus loudness.
  • Tinnitus vanished by awakening and then returning
    a few hours into the day suggests that during the
    day they are re-activating their tinnitus through
    somatic mechanisms, such as the tonic muscle
    contractions required to support the head in an
    upright position or clenching related to the
    stress of daily activities.
  • Tinnitus that is louder after awakening from a
    nap in a chair may related to somatic factors
    such as stretching of the neck muscles when their
    head passively falls forward while dozing in a
    sitting position.

48
Otoacoustic emissions
  • While spontaneous emissions are common (75 of
    female and 45 of male normal or near normal
    ears), tinnitus due to spontaneous otoacoustic
    emissions is uncommon.
  • said to account for tinnitus of 1-2 of the
    patients of one British tinnitus clinic
  • The diagnosis is made by measuring an emission
    and showing that its suppression abolishes the
    tinnitus.
  • The emission can be suppressed in either of two
    ways
  • Presentation of a low-level tone near the
    emission frequency
  • The use of aspirin (Penner and Coles, 1992)

49
SOAE-Associated Tinnitus
  • SOAEs are estimated to be responsible for at
    least part of the tinnitus in 1 to 9 of tinnitus
    patients.
  • Penner (1990) 4
  • Baskin Coles (1992) 2
  • In most patients, the SOAEs are somewhat variable
    in frequency and amplitude--causing them to be
    audible, counteracting tendency for adaptation.

50
SOAE-Associated Tinnitus
  • Accounts for 1-9 of cases
  • May be hum or tonal
  • Generally in younger patients and localized in
    better ear
  • Responds to drug induced suppression
  • Case

51
Sensorineural Generation
  • Auditory deprivation and conductive hearing loss
  • SOAE-associated tinnitus
  • Cochlear disorders (SNHL)
  • Central processing effects

52
Sensorineural Hearing Loss
  • 70-90 of tinnitus sufferers have hearing loss
  • NIHL is a major factor in approximately 38 of
    all tinnitus patients
  • Menieres is the next most prevalent etiology at
    12
  • The prevalence (not loudness) of the tinnitus is
    related to the severity of the hearing loss but
    it accompanies SNHL more frequently when the
    onset of the hearing loss is sudden

53
Central Processing Effects
  • The organization of the auditory system is
    dynamic--events causes changes within the system
  • Injury
  • Overstimulation
  • Moller (1995) and Cacace et al. (1995) Severe
    tinnitus hyperacusis is caused by hyperactivity
    of the nuclei in the ascending auditory pathway,
    particularly within the inferior colliculus

54
Auditory Deprivation
  • Coles (1995) suggests that the central nervous
    system reacts to the lack of neural stimulation
    from the ear (phantom signal) by increasing its
    attentiveness to the auditory signals that do
    reach it, with consequent awareness of sounds
    arising from previously subliminal abnormal
    neural activity in the system.

55
Tinnitus triggers
  • Physical (viral, medication, hearing loss
    (imbalance between excitatory and inhibitory
    neurons), neurotoxicity from noise, somatic
    influences)
  • psychological
  • retirement syndrome
  • stress related

56
Tinnitus exacerbating factors
  • caffeine
  • alcohol
  • nicotine
  • sodium
  • stress
  • noise exposure
  • high cholesterol, hyperlipidemia, hyper and
    hypothryroidism

57
Some drugs reported to be associated with
tinnitus
  • salicylates
  • non-narcotic analgesics
  • ototoxic diuretics
  • ototoxic antibiotics
  • ototoxic cisplatin
  • caffeine
  • alcohol
  • cocaine
  • marijuana
  • oral contraceptives

58
Essential attributes for inducing tinnitus
sensitization (opposite of habituation)
  • Tinnitus is considered noxious
  • Tinnitus may induce fear
  • Tinnitus progression is unpredictable
  • Patient is helpless (loss of control) and cant
    cope
  • Patient is anxious
  • If present, engagement if not present,
    disengagement

59
Most common difficulties attributed to tinnitus
  • Annoyance, irritation, stress
  • Concentration, confusion
  • Drug dependence
  • Pain/headaches
  • Sleep
  • Persistence
  • Speech understanding
  • Despair, frustration, depression

Tyler and Baker, 1983
60
Tinnitus Management Team
  • Audiologist
  • Psychologist
  • Psychiatrist
  • Otolaryngologist
  • Neurologist
  • Pharmacologist
  • Nutritionist
  • TMJ Specialist
  • Physical Therapist
  • Biofeedback Specialist

61
Tinnitus Questionnaire
  • Otologic
  • Medical
  • Audiologic
  • Diet
  • Exercise
  • Emotional Pattern
  • Sleep
  • Previous Treatments

62
Defining the tinnitus problem
  • time
  • behaviors affected
  • attitudes and thoughts
  • what affects the tinnitus?
  • how would your life be affected if you didnt
    have tinnitus?

63
Give the patient a chance to vent
  • But only for a while!!!!!!!
  • .And less time each visit

64
Assessment inventories and audiological
diagnostic tests
  • All testing is done for both diagnostic and
    therapeutic purposes

65
Potentially useful diagnostic procedures
  • audiogram
  • assessment (severity) scales
  • psychological profiles
  • tinnitus matching (do loudness match first)
  • loudness discomfort levels
  • minimum masking levels
  • OAEs
  • ultra high frequency testing
  • immittance/reflexes/decay

66
Tinnitus matching
Loudness
Pitch
  • usually less than 6 dB SL
  • may be more appropriate to convert to sones
  • 82 match above 3KHz
  • 14 match above 9KHz

Maskability (MML)
  • 0-3 dB easy to mask
  • 4-10 dB masking may be intrusive
  • 10 dB difficult to mask

67
Assessment Inventories
  • Tinnitus Severity Scale - Sweetow and Levy
  • Tinnitus Handicap Inventory - Newman et al
  • Tinnitus Handicap Questionnaire - Kuk, et al
  • Tinnitus Effects Questionnaire - Hallam, et al
  • Tinnitus Reaction Questionnaire - Wilson, et al
  • Tinnitus Cognitive Questionnaire (TCQ) - Wilson
    and Henry

68
Tinnitus Handicap Inventory (THI) - Newman, et
al, 1998
  • 25 items (yes - 4 sometimes - 2 no - 0)
  • functional
  • emotional
  • catastrophic
  • THI 0-16 No handicap
  • THI 18-36 Mild handicap
  • THI 38-56 Moderate handicap
  • THI 58-100 Severe handicap
  • 20 point difference significant change

69
Minimally screen for depression and anxiety
  • Used for referral purposes
  • High scores do not determine that patient has a
    depressive or anxiety disorder

70
Red Flags for Behavioral Health Co-Treatment
  • High level of anxiety or depression
  • Obsessional focus on tinnitus
  • Significant work impairment
  • Marginal coping lack of adequate support system
  • Refuses tinnitus tools but requests excessive or
    inappropriate treatment

71
Tinnitus patient management procedures we wont
discuss
  • Medication
  • Perfusions
  • Surgery
  • Stress Management
  • Biofeedback
  • Nutritional Counseling

72
Medications
  • xanax, prozac, neurontin, lexepro
  • muscle relaxants
  • if clinically significant anxiety or panic, med
    eval for SSRI or appropriate meds
  • if on SSRI, may need to increase dosage
  • can blunt perception of obnoxious physical
    symptoms bolster coping skills

73
Effects of neurotransmitters
  • Acetylcholine - voluntary movement of the muscles
  • Norepinephrine - wakefulness or arousal
  • Dopamine - voluntary movement and motivation,
    "wanting", pleasure, associated with addiction
    and love
  • Serotonin - memory, emotions, wakefulness, sleep
    and temperature regulation
  • GABA - inhibition of motor neurons
  • Glycine - spinal reflexes and motor behaviour
  • Neuromodulators - sensory transmission -
    especially pain

74
  • Neurons expressing certain types of
    neurotransmitters sometimes form distinct
    systems, where activation of the system causes
    effects in large volumes of the brain, called
    volume transmission.
  • The major neurotransmitter systems are the
    noradrenaline (norepinephrine) system, the
    dopamine system, the serotonin system and the
    cholinergic system.
  • Drugs targeting the neurotransmitter of such
    systems affects the whole system, and explains
    the mode of action of many drugs
  • Cocaine, for example, blocks the reuptake of
    dopamine, leaving these neurotransmitters in the
    synaptic gap longer.
  • Prozac is a selective serotonin reuptake
    inhibitor (SSRI), hence potentiating the effect
    of naturally released serotonin.
  • AMPT prevents the conversion of tyrosine to
    L-DOPA, the precursor to dopamine
  • reserpine prevents dopamine storage within
    vesicles
  • deprenyl inhibits monoamine oxidase (MAO)-B and
    thus increases dopamine levels.

75
Salicylates
  • Aspirin, ibuprofen, advil NSAIDs, naproxen,
    motrin
  • Dristan, anacin, excedrin, bufferin
  • Alka seltzer, pepto bisomol, pamprin, certain
    breath savers, lozenges, wintergreen

76
Alternative Approaches
  • ginkgo biloba
  • fish oil omega fatty acids
  • acupuncture
  • hyperbaric treatment
  • magnetotherapy
  • lasertherapy
  • homeopathy
  • naturopathy (like cures like)
  • osteopathy
  • DMSO
  • anticholinergic drugs (glutamic acid)
  • vaso-active drugs and carbogen inhalation
  • baclofen injections
  • electrostimulation

77
Newer, unproven approaches
  • Tinnimed Laser (20 minutes daily for 10 weeks)
    designed to alter cell metabolism
  • Phase shift tinnitus reduction for mono-frequency
    tinnitus
  • Melmedtronics ultrasonic The Inhibitor
    (www.tinnitustreatment.com) hand-held device
    that emits a 60 econd ultrasonic signal providing
    temporary relief for 70-75 of patients.lasting
    from minutes to weeks!
  • Sequential sound therapy (phase 1 - mask, phase 2
    interact, phase 3 noise
  • Repetitive Trans-cranial Magnetic Stimulation
    (rTMS) for unilateral, in opposite cortex

78
Reasonable tinnitus patient management
procedures (in no special order)
  • Masking
  • Amplification
  • Reassurance (including placebo)
  • Education
  • Desensitization / Habituation (TRT)
  • Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy
  • Neuromonics acoustic desensitization protocol

79
Tinnitus maskers
  • Used at lowest levels possible to mask tinnitus

80
Tinnitus and hearing loss
  • Only 5 of the patients had normal hearing at all
    frequencies. Twenty-two percent were suitable as
    hearing aid candidates, but only half of these
    actually used them. Thus, the remaining 73
    possessed a hearing loss, but this was too
    localized for the high frequencies for hearing
    aids to be beneficial.
  • (Davis, Wilde Steed, 1999)

81
The mean hearing threshold levels of ninety
consecutive patients in a university tinnitus
clinic are displayed in Figure 1 (Davis, Wilde
Steed, 1999)
82
Why hearing aids help tinnitus patients
  • Mask tinnitus
  • Reduce contrast
  • Alter production peripherally and/or centrally
  • Greater neural activity allows brain to correct
    for abnormal reduced inhibition
  • Structured pattern is created
  • Fatigue and stress is reduced allowing more
    resources to be allocated to tinnitus fight
  • Facilitate habituation

83
Why hearing aids might NOT help
  • Reactive tinnitus (fairly rare)
  • Increased distortion
  • Discomfort
  • Somatic awareness
  • Fear
  • Stigma
  • Cost / benefit ratio

84
Special considerations for fitting hearing aids
  • Expansion
  • Noise reduction
  • Open fit
  • Feedback
  • Multiple programs
  • Compression and maximum output
  • Trial period may not be adequate

85
Use of tinnitus instruments as maskers
  • Combination hearing aid/masker
  • Improves audibility
  • Reduces contrast of tinnitus to silence

86
Tinnitus Retraining Therapy
  • directive counseling
  • auditory (low level noise) therapy

87
TRT Model (Jastreboff. 1995)
Perception Evaluation
Auditory and Other Cortical Centers
Detection (Behavioral)
Emotional Associations Limbic System
TRIGGER (Cochlear)
Annoyance
88
Research supporting central location
  • Heller and Bergman, 1951
  • Andersson, et al 1997 Baguley et al, 1992
    (translabyrinthine surgery)
  • Lockwood and Salvi, 1998 Burkard, 2001(PET)
  • Kaltenbach, 2000 (cochlear nucleus hyperactivity
    despite cochlear destruction)
  • Zacharek, 2002 (sustained DCN acitivity following
    noise damaged cochlear ablation)

89
Objectives
  • initiate and facilitate tinnitus habituation
  • remove perception from patients consciousness

90
Perception evaluation
  • negative counseling enhances initial aversive
    association of the tinnitus with an emotional
    state
  • attitudes and behaviors are subject to
    modification
  • cortical associations can be altered

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Counseling
  • Educational
  • Guided
  • Directive

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Basic assumptions
  • The brain can sort out meaningful stimuli from
    those which are not
  • Attention is directed toward "salient" or
    information-bearing stimuli

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Summary - Why brain focuses on tinnitus
  • brain is programmed to respond to sound
  • tinnitus is not a sound
  • brain becomes confused
  • neural plasticity
  • lateral inhibition is diminished
  • Brain is conditioned to react

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Mock counseling session
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TRT - Mean Scores from Tinnitus Severity Index
(Henry)
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TRT - Mean Scores from Tinnitus Handicap Inventory
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Mean Percentages TRT Tinnitus Awareness
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Mean Percentages TRT Tinnitus Annoyance
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Factors influencing patient's ability to habituate
  • stress levels of patient
  • support system of patient
  • coping abilities of patient
  • patient's insight into disease/disorder
  • patient's educational level
  • interactions among above

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Definition of Cognitive-Behavior Therapy
  • The therapeutic effort to modify maladaptive
    thoughts and behaviors by applying systematic,
    measurable implementation of strategies designed
    to alter unproductive actions

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Similarities of tinnitus with pain
  • subjective
  • invisible
  • affected by extraneous events

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Process
  • changing the way one interprets thinks and feels
  • modifying ones actions for a specific purpose
  • removing inappropriate beliefs, anxieties and
    fears
  • removing tinnitus status as an entity of its own
  • standard procedures in-office and homework
  • severity scaling inventories

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CBT gives patients hypotheses that can be
self-testedMost effective when combined with
attention control, imagery training and relaxation
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Learned process
  • Subject to behavioral and cognitive modifications

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Common cognitive distortions
  • All or nothing thinking no shades of gray my
    life used to be perfect, now it is horrible
  • Mental filter one aspect of a complex
    situation is the focus of attention, while others
    are ignored I was having a good time at the
    party, but my tinnitus ruined everything
  • Mind reading assuming others thoughts without
    evidence, people think Im dumb when I ask them
    to repeat
  • Jumping to conclusions assuming negative
    expectations about future events as established
    facts I will have a lousy day when my tinnitus is
    the first thing I hear in the morning
  • Emotional reasoning assuming emotional
    reactions reflect the true situation my tinnitus
    makes me feel hopeless, there is no hope
  • Labeling attaching a global label to oneself
    rather than to specific events or actions having
    tinnitus makes me a disabled person

  • (continued)

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Common cognitive distortions
  • Overgeneralization an event is characteristic
    of life in general, as opposed to specific
    because of my tinnitus I was awake sall night.
    Every night is the same.
  • Disqualifying the positive positive experiences
    that would conflict with negative views are
    discounted I did better today, but that was a
    fluke
  • Catastrophizing negative events are treated as
    intolerable rather than in perspective my
    tinnitus is louder, I must be going deaf
  • Should statements using should and have to
    statements to provide motivation or control I
    should never have listened to rock music
  • Personalization assuming one is the cause of a
    particular event when in fact other factors are
    responsible I ruined everyones evening because
    I was miserable

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Examples of Operational Statements
  • Inadequate Response Acceptable Response
  • Tinnitus keeps me awake I fall asleep relatively
    easily but then I awaken twice
    each night and it takes about an hour to
    fall back asleep
  • Tinnitus drives me crazy I am finding it
    difficult to concentrate when I can't
    find any quiet time. This makes me
    angry and I'm losing my temper around
    my family.

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Situation
Cognitive Distortion
Rational Thought
I wake up and hear my tinnitus, so I know its
going to be a bad day
What I do will determine how my day goes
Jumping to conclusions
All or nothing thinking
Behavior Current Status Mod.
Improvement Goal
falling asleep 2 hours
60 minutes 30 minutes
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CBT
  • what things do you like to do
  • Give me some excuses for not doing them
  • what would your best friend say to you about
    these excuses?

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Tyler, et al, 2004
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Differences between CBT and TRT
  • Cog therapy is intensive, collaborative with 8-12
    weekly sessions and testing of hypotheses
  • TRT directive counseling is directive with 4-6
    sessions over 18 months.
  • Tinnitus remains, but coping skills improve

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Contrasting anxiety from depression(Wilson, et
al, 1998)
  • TRT assumes an anxiety focus
  • Cognitive therapy assumes a depressive focus

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3 levels of complexity
  • 1. basic education and support2. small number
    of general counseling sessions3. extended
    therapy 2-3 months, with follow up as needed

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CBT / tinnitus books
  • Mind Over Matter Greenberger and Padesky
  • Feeling Good David Burns (Signet)
  • Tinnitus A self management guide for the
    ringing in your ears Jane Henry and Peter Wilson
    (Allyn and Bacon)
  • Tinnitus Rehabilitation by Retraining Bernahard
    Kellerhals and Regula Zogg (Karger)
  • Living with Tinnitus Paul Davis (Health Books)

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Turf Wars
  • Psychologists say TRT is nothing new
  • Jakes and Hallam basically described it years
    before it became popular
  • TRT suffers from lack of methodological
    confirmation (i.e. no treatment waiting control
    groups)
  • Does not consider depression and anxiety
  • As many as 40 of tinnitus patients may suffer
    from depression and anxiety
  • Consider interaction/collaboration more important
    than directive counseling
  • TRT does not teach coping strategies
  • CBT takes 8-12 weeks, not 18 24 months

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Turf Wars, (continued)
  • Herwig, et al suggests TRT is old wine in new
    bottles and is based on Hallams 1987 model)
  • Cognitive restructuring (dissociation of negative
    emotional association)
  • Attention directing
  • Stress management
  • Coping strategies
  • Modification of avoidance behavior

Wilson et al, British Journal of Audiology, 1998
Herwig, et al, Scandinavian Audiology, 2000
118
Differences between TRT and Cognitive Therapies
  • CT is intensive and collaborative designed for
    8-12 weekly sessions and direct testing of
    hypotheses
  • TRT uses directive counseling with 4-6 sessions
    over 18 month period
  • TRT assumes an anxiety model
  • CT assumes a depression model

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Sound Therapies
  • Masking
  • Partial Masking
  • Mixing
  • Ultrasonic therapy (hi sonic, quiet sonic) -
    unproven
  • Music

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DTM
  • DTM sounds use proprietary dynamic (changing)
    sound formats that are intended to enhance
    masking and distract attention away from
    tinnitus.
  • Dynamic acoustic technology refers to
    proprietary semi-random, short-term amplitude and
    frequency domain modulation signal processing
  • E-Nature and E-Water, have been dynamically
    processed to provide expanded amplitude peaks on
    the order of 5 to 15 dB, over corresponding time
    durations on the order of 10 to 500 msec.

121
Ultrasonic sound generators
  • Ultra Quiet (6-20KHz BC)
  • Hi-Sonic TRD (19-27KHz BC)
  • Melmedtronics Inhibitor
  • 60 sec ultrasonic signal with hand held bone
    vibrator to mastoid (19-25KHz or 42-48 KHz).
    Claims it works on 75 of patients (by being out
    of phase of tinnitus!!!!)
  • non-returnable

122
Sound enhancement for desensitization /
habituation
  • low level noise interferes with pattern
    recognition by increasing neuronal activity
  • this makes tinnitus more difficult to detect /
    reduces contrast
  • gradually increasing input could decrease gain
    over an extended time

123
Acceptable noise level
  • Nabaleks ANL measures patients willingness to
    accept background noise when listening to speech

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Current sound treatments
  • Noise generators
  • Maskers
  • Music
  • Hearing aids
  • Combination instruments
  • Home based
  • CDs (e.g. Personal Growth Tinnitus Relief,
    Petroff DTM)

125
Goals
  • Active listening (distraction)
  • Masking (covering up)
  • Passive listening (habituation, desensitization))

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Sound (noise) Generators
  • GHI Tranquil, Harmony, Simply Tranquil
  • Hansaton
  • United Hearing Systems
  • Viennatone Silent Star
  • Starkey masker and combination
  • Ultra Quiet (6-20KHz BC)
  • Hi-Sonic TRD (19-27KHz BC)
  • MelMedtronics Inhibitor
  • Sharper Image Portable Sound Soother
  • Brookstone environmental devices
  • Pillow speakers
  • iPod / Treo

128
Neuromonics
  • a bit of cognitive therapy
  • a bit of TRT
  • music therapy (for affect and relaxation) and
    wide band stimulation using a iPod-like processor
    with Bang and Olufsen earphones
  • rhythm, melody
  • hearing instrument algorithm (equal sensation
    level) for hearing loss compensation
  • 2 stage program
  • rather expensive

129
Davis, et al comparison, 2002
Note change between baseline and pre Tx (16 weeks
later)
130
Mean Tinnitus Awareness (Percentage of the Time)
at Follow-up. Means are the percentage of time
which participants were generally aware of their
tinnitus over the preceding week.
  • Noise 41.9
  • Counseling 39.2
  • Music masking 30.4
  • ADP 12.3

Davis et al, 2002
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This trial was reportedly done with no
counseling
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Why cant we just use an iPod?
  • Frequency shaping
  • Loudness balance
  • Compression

137
Music can be soothing or irritating
  • The physical body and chakra centers respond
    specifically to certain tones and frequencies.
  • Meditation and Relaxation recordings may actually
    produce adverse EEG patterns, as much as Hard
    Rock and Heavy Metal.
  • With perceived soothing sounds, a right/left
    brain hemisphere synchronization occurs voltage
    spike pattern smoothes and voltage differential
    equalized.
  • Selecting what will work for any individual is
    difficult.
  • We all have different tastes

138
Categorical Expectations
  • We dont like the unexpected
  • But certain rules have to be followed
  • Active listening arouses, passive listening
    soothes
  • Active listening distracts, passive listening may
    allow for increased cognitive function
  • For tinnitus patients, active listening draws
    attention to the tinnitus, passive listening may
    facilitate habituation

139
Selecting the right sound
  • Sounds affect people in different ways, due to
    inherent and learned preferences (Iversen et al,
    2000).
  • It is thus important to use relaxing background
    sounds (that activate the parasympathetic
    division of the autonomic nervous system) and
    avoid exposure to negative or annoying sounds
    (that activate the sympathetic division)
  • Bolero example

140
Does sound therapy help?
  • McKinney, et al 1999
  • Counseling only 72 showed improvement (N54)
  • Counseling with sound generators at just audible
    level 75 showed improvement (N72)
  • Counseling with hearing aids 61 showed
    improvement (N56)
  • Counseling with sound generators at mixing level
    83 showed improvement (N only 36)

141
Does sound therapy help?
  • Herraiz, et al, 1999
  • Counseling only 94 showed improvement (N
    30)
  • Counseling with hearing aids 85 showed
    improvement (N 35)
  • Counseling with sound generators 83 showed
    improvement (N 30)
  • My conclusion.not definitive proof.yet 70 of
    TRT users get them!

142
Improvement
  • Reduction in the number of episodes of awareness
  • Increase in the intervals between episodes of
    awareness
  • Increase in quality of life
  • Not necessarily a reduction in perceived loudness

143
Psychological Treatment Objective
  • Tinnitus remains, but coping skills improve
  • I have tinnitus, it doesnt have me.

144
So what works?
  • Any of the reasonable approaches, depending on
    the skills of the audiologist

145
Some suggestions.
  • Ask what will make this encounter or therapy
    successful in your mind?
  • Remember that tinnitus patient management is a
    journey, remind patients of the ups and downs to
    be expected
  • Tell patient that 1st thought upon recognizing
    tinnitus should be..

146
Counsel about the following
  • Tinnitus is not unique to that one patient.
  • Tinnitus is not a sign of insanity or grave
    illness.
  • Tinnitus may be a normal consequence of hearing
    loss
  • Tinnitus probably is not a sign of impending
    deafness.
  • There is no evidence to suggest the tinnitus will
    get worse.
  • Tinnitus does not have to result in a lack of
    control.
  • Patients who can sleep can best manage their
    tinnitus.

147
Counsel about the following
  • Tinnitus is real, and not imagined.
  • Tinnitus may be permanent.
  • Reaction to the tinnitus is the source of the
    problem.
  • Reaction to the symptom is manageable and
    subject to modification.
  • If significance and threat is removed,
    habituation or "gating" of attention can be
    achieved.
  • Stay off the internet!

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Factors Affecting Outcome
  • mood
  • general health
  • motivation
  • concentration
  • time interval between pre and post tests
  • Skill of the professional

149
Follow-up considerations
  • When
  • How
  • For how long

150
Attitude of the Professional
  • Patients will not regard therapeutic programs to
    be viable unless the clinician appears to believe
    it is
  • Passion is the key

151
New CPT codes
  • 92626 Eval of aud rehab 1st hr (Medicare other
    3rd party payers ok because it's an eval
  • 92627 Each add'l 15 min (Medicare other 3rd
    part payers ok as it's an eval
  • 92630 Aud rehab pre-lingual (No Medicare as
    considered treatment may bill some 3rd party
    payers)
  • 92633 Aud rehab post-lingual (No Medicare as
    considered treatment may bill some 3rd party
    payers)
  • 92625 Tinnitus matching
  • 92700 Tinnitus devices

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Tinnitus research issues
  • selection and number of subjects
  • group mean data
  • research design
  • measurement scales
  • interpreting the findings
  • follow-up data

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American Tinnitus Association
  • P.O. Box 5
  • Portland, Oregon 97207
  • 800-634-8978

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robert.sweetow_at_ucsfmedctr.org
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