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Inner Ear Dysfunction

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Ringing, buzzing, roaring, clicking experienced in one or both ears. Objective tinnitus ... Neurochemical change in midbrain or cortex may contribute to ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Inner Ear Dysfunction


1
Inner Ear Dysfunction
  • Upcoming Talk Isabelle Peretz
  • Musical Non-musical Brains
  • Nov. 22 _at_ 12 noon Lunch
  • Rm 2068B South Building

2
Neural Correlates of Stream Segregation
  • Summation of cortical response hypothesis
  • (DRAW) Will a stimulated area summate with
    another stimulated area on the tonotopic map?
  • Tetanic rapid stimulation increases probability
    of summation (Fishman et al., 2001)
  • ALTERNATIVELY?
  • Lesions of temporal cortex (in and around primary
    auditory cortex) (Peretz and colleagues, 1999
    2001)
  • Poster temporal gyrus affects melodic grouping
  • Intervals, melodic contours
  • Anterior temporal gyrus affects meter
  • Rhythmic grouping, temporal combinations

3
Tinnitus It has a certain ring to it (see
Mencher pp. 144-145)
  • What is Tinnitus?
  • Ringing, buzzing, roaring, clicking experienced
    in one or both ears
  • Objective tinnitus
  • Audible to a third party
  • Stethoscope examination
  • Less than 5 of all tinnitus sufferers
  • Subjective tinnitus
  • Audible only to the patient
  • Subjective report
  • Approx. 35 of the population (continuous 15)
  • Severe in 15 of tinnitus sufferers
  • Incidence increases with age hearing loss
  • Noise-induced trauma

4
Causes of Tinnitus
  • Vibratory
  • Acoustic stimulation of cochlea
  • Pulsatile tinnitus Rhythmic pulsing, heartbeat
  • Leudets tinnitus crackling of involuntary
    muscles
  • Jaw neck position
  • Clicking tinnitus Clicking sound that may occur
    with serous otitis media
  • May be objective or subjective
  • Non-vibratory
  • Neurochemical changes
  • Not traced to acoustic stimulation
  • Subjective tinnitus

5
Physiological-subjective tinnitus (Jastreboff,
1990)
  • Cochlear causes
  • Increased otoacoustic emissions
  • Continuous spontaneous firing (4)
  • Collapsing tectorial membrane
  • Chronic bent inner hair cells
  • Tetanic stimulation of auditory system
  • Reduced outer hair cell population
  • Inability to modulate gain
  • Chronic higher sensitivity to background noise
  • Hyperacusis chronic oversensitivity (40
    correlation)
  • Correlation with Sensori-neural hearing loss

6
Higher-level Tinnitus(Lockwood et al., 1998)
  • Persistent symptoms after transection of auditory
    pathway
  • Cortical phenomenon?
  • fMRI evidence (blood flow)
  • Typical auditory stimulation bilateral
    activation
  • Tinnitus causes unilateral activation
  • Modulation of tinnitus has unilateral effects
  • Neurochemical change in midbrain or cortex may
    contribute to tinnitus

7
Summary Treatments
  • Variety of contributing pathologies
  • Physical
  • Pinched blood vessel, loud-noise exposure,
    muscular activity, stress
  • Toxicity
  • Foods (allergic reactions), quinine, aspirin,
    cigarettes, alcohol, caffeine
  • Multiple causes
  • Treatments
  • Jaw position
  • Cutting cochlear nerve (50 effective)
  • Masking noise
  • Effectiveness of noise suggests no dementia
  • Hearing Aid use
  • Tinnitus retraining therapy
  • Habituation to tinnitus sound to reduce
    aversiveness
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