| Literature DB >> 20628627 |
Michele Fornaro1, Matteo Martino.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Subjective tinnitus is a frequent, impairing condition, which may also cause neurotransmitter imbalance at the cochlea. Psychopharmacologic agents, although not being the first-line treatment for tinnitus, may modulate cochlear neurotransmission, thereby influencing the subjective tinnitus experience.Entities:
Keywords: cochlea; psychopharmacology; tinnitus
Year: 2010 PMID: 20628627 PMCID: PMC2898164 DOI: 10.2147/ndt.s10361
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neuropsychiatr Dis Treat ISSN: 1176-6328 Impact factor: 2.570
Main hypothesized pathomechanisms and causes of tinnitus
| Spontaneous otoacoustic emissions | Small acoustic signals perceived as tinnitus |
| Edge theory | Increased spontaneous activity in the edge area |
| Discordant theory | Discordant dysfunction of damaged outer hair cells and intact inner hair cells |
| The dorsal cochlear nucleus | Hyperactivity/plastic readjustment of DCN |
| Auditory plasticity theory | Enhanced neural activity due to cochlear damage |
| Crosstalk theory | Ephaptic coupling between nerve fibers |
| Otologic problems and hearing loss | Loud noise, presbycusis, Ménière’s disease, acoustic neuroma, external ear infection |
| Pharmacological causes | Analgesics, antibiotics, chemotherapy and antiviral drugs, loop diuretics, antidepressants, psychedelic drugs (5-MeO-DET, 5-Methoxy-diisopropyltryptamine, diisopropyltryptamine, harmaline, N,N-dimethyltryptamine, psilocybin, salvinorin A) |
| Neurologic disorders | Traumatic brain injury, meningitis, encephalitis, strokes, multiple sclerosis, chiari malformation, auditory nerve injury |
| Metabolic disorders | Thyroid disorder, hyperlipidemia, vitamin B12 deficiency, iron deficiency, anemia |
| Psychiatric disorders | Anxious and depressive states |
| Other | Tension myositis syndrome, fibromyalgia, head and neck muscle spasm, temporomandibular joint disorders, thoracic outlet syndrome, lyme disease, hypnogogia, sleep paralysis, glomus tympanicum, herpes infections |
| Pulsatile tinnitus: Altered blood flow or increased blood turbulence near the ear | Atherosclerosis, venous hum, carotid artery aneurysm, carotid artery dissection |
| Muscle contractions that cause clicks or crackling around the middle ear |
Main pharmacological agents for subjective tinnitus
| TCAs | NA- and 5HT-ergic transmission modulation, anticholinergic action, BDNF synthesis enhancement | Nortriptyline | Superior to placebo (RTC) (higher doses of TCAs and SSRIs appear to work for tinnitus patients who also exhibit depression and anxiety or insomnia) |
| Amitriptyline | Some success (case reports and a single blind study). Low doses sometimes related to tinnitus onset | ||
| Trimipramine | Less effective than placebo (RTC) | ||
| Clomipramine | High doses associated with tinnitus onset | ||
| SSRIs | 5HT-ergic transmission modulation, BDNF synthesis enhancement | Paroxetine | No significant improvement for nondepressed patients (RTC) |
| Sertraline | More effective than placebo for severe refractory tinnitus cases (RTC) | ||
| Fluoxetine | Worsening of most of the tinnitus cases | ||
| SNRIs | NA- and 5HT-ergic transmission modulation, BDNF synthesis enhancement | Duloxetine | Withdrawal has been seldom associated with tinnitus |
| Venlafaxine | Some success (case reports); withdrawal has been seldom associated with tinnitus | ||
| NDRIs | NA- and DA-ergic transmission modulation, BDNF synthesis enhancement | Bupropion | Limited-sample reports indicated its potential induction of tinnitus |
| Heterocyclics | Mianserin | Lack of evidence | |
| Trazodone | Lack of evidence | ||
| Benzodiazepines | GABA-A-ergic transmission modulation (alprazolam, clonazepam, midazolam: short half/average-life and pro 5-HT-ergic features) | Alprazolam | Superior to placebo in the treatment of severe disabling tinnitus of predominantly cochlear origin (effective especially for those patients presenting high levels of co-morbid anxiety) |
| Clonazepam | Superior to placebo (effective also for pulsatile tinnitus when associated with beta-blocker agents) | ||
| Midazolam | Superior to placebo | ||
| GABA-B agonists | Muscle relaxing and antispastic action | Baclofen | Effective for pulsatile tinnitus |
| Mood stabilizers | |||
| Antiepileptics | GABA-ergic transmission enhancement, GABA transaminase inhibition, alpha (2) delta calcium channel antagonism, others (histone deacetylases role, GSK-3 remodeling and synapsin I clustering) | Carbamazepine | Some success in case reports and trials (limited sampled reports indicated its potential induction of objective tinnitus) |
| Gabapentin | Effective in reducing subjective or objective tinnitus, especially in individuals with associated acoustic trauma (RTC) | ||
| Lamotrigine | Ineffective (RTC) | ||
| Valproate | Effective in a single case study (while another single-case evidence reported its potential role in inducing tinnitus) | ||
| Vigabatrin | Animal studies only | ||
| Pregabalin | No systematic evidence | ||
| Lithium | Inhibitory effect on the phosphoinositide cascade, proserotonergic at higher doses? Others | Not systematically assessed for tinnitus | |
| Acamprosate | NDMA receptor blockade and GABA-ergic transmission enhancing | Superior than placebo in a double-blind study (potentially effective even for depressed or chronically anxious tinnitus patients) | |
| Memantine | Hair cells NMDA transmission blockade and cholinergic modulation | Not yet investigated in humans for tinnitus treatment | |
| Typical | Auditolimbic D2 DA-ergic modulation | Cases of schizophrenic patients treated with antipsychotics for tinnitus-like sensations | |
| Atypical | Dose-depending D2 receptor antagonism (postsynaptic D2-blockade at high doses and presynaptic auto-inhibitory D2-blockade at low doses with DA release instead of reduction), D2 partial agonism, others | Sulpiride (low doses) + hydroxyzine or melatonin | Superior to placebo in a single blind placebo-controlled study and in a RTC |
| Lidocain | L-type CA++ channels blockade, indirectly contributing to glutamatergic, GABA-ergic and cholinergic transmission modulation | Partially effective | |
| Melatonin | Pineal neurohormone with melatonergic agonism and anti-DA-ergic actions | Partially effective, especially in patients with sleep disturbance | |
| Botulinum toxin | Inhibition of acetylcholine release at the neuromuscular junction | Partially effective in somatic tinnitus | |
| Zinc, antioxidants, minerals, vitamins, ginko biloba and other herbal remedies | Different mechanisms of action | Alternate results or ineffective | |
| Agomelatine | MT1/MT2 melatonergic agonism and 5-HT2C-ergic antagonism | No evidence to date | |
| Varenicline | Nicotinic acetylcholine receptor partial agonism | No evidence to date | |
Abbreviations: DA, dopamine; TCA, tricyclic antidepressants; CA, calcium; GABA gamma-aminobutyric acid; SSRIs, selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors; SNRIs, serotonin norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors; NDRIs, norepinephrine and dopamine reuptake inhibitors; NDMA, N-methyl D-aspartate; RTC, relaxation training control; BDNF, brain-derived neurotropic factor; NA, noradrenaline; GSK-3, glycogen synthase kinase-3; MT, metallothionen.