| Literature DB >> 15971936 |
Nathan Weisz1, Stephan Moratti, Marcus Meinzer, Katalin Dohrmann, Thomas Elbert.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The neurophysiological mechanisms underlying tinnitus perception are not well understood. Surprisingly, there have been no group studies comparing abnormalities in ongoing, spontaneous neuronal activity in individuals with and without tinnitus perception. METHODS ANDEntities:
Mesh:
Year: 2005 PMID: 15971936 PMCID: PMC1160568 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pmed.0020153
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Med ISSN: 1549-1277 Impact factor: 11.069
Participant Information
a Note that sometimes the participants' assumption is given together with an unknown etiology.
b Values in parentheses are total scores on the Tinnitus Questionnaire. Bil., bilateral, dom., dominant; HL, hearing level. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pmed.0020153.t001
Figure 1Power Spectra Averaged over All Sensors Show a Reduced Alpha Peak in Participants with Tinnitus and an Enhancement for Delta
The sharp peak centred at 16 2/3 Hz represents technical noise resulting from the 1-km-distant railway system.
Figure 2Difference Maps between Participants with Tinnitus and Controls for Alpha and Delta
The results suggest that areas for which alpha reduction and delta enhancements are found partly overlap. Overall, the effect for the alpha band is considerably stronger (note that for this reason the scaling ranges are chosen differently).
Figure 3Display of the Group × Frequency Band Interaction Effects Averaged over Temporal Sources
Effects for right (A) and left (B) temporal cortex, where the strongest enhancements of alpha and reductions of were found.
Correlations of Power with Tinnitus Questionnaire
Correlation coefficients between power in frequency bands and scores on the Tinnitus Questionnaire. Statistically significant correlations are in red. Note that significance level has not been corrected (see Methods for rationale). Significance assessed with t-test (df = 15). *, p < 0.05; **, p < 0.01.
a ant, anterior; occi, occipital; par, parietal; post fr., posteriofrontal; pos, posterior; pre fr., prefrontal; temp, temporal.
b Cog, Cognitive; Emo, Emotional; Intr, Intrusiveness; Sleep, Sleep Problems.
Figure 4Correlation Map between Alpha, Delta, and Tinnitus-Related Distress
Since previous analyses (see Figure 3) implicated corresponding areas for the effects found for alpha and delta, tinnitus-related distress was additionally correlated with a frequency index ([delta – alpha]/[delta + alpha]; bottom panel). Effects are largest for right temporal and left frontal sources.