| Literature DB >> 26771015 |
Hyun Joon Shim1, Min Young Kwak1, Yong-Hwi An1, Dong Hyun Kim1, Yun Jin Kim1, Hyo Jung Kim1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: A recent study demonstrated that tinnitus could be eliminated by vagus nerve stimulation (VNS) paired with notched sounds in a rat tinnitus model. The aims of this clinical study were to investigate the effects and safety of transcutaneous VNS (tVNS) by patch-type electrode paired with notched music for treating chronic tinnitus. SUBJECTS AND METHODS: Thirty patients with refractory chronic tinnitus for >12 months were included in this study. A patch-type electrode was attached to the auricular concha of the patient's left ear and tVNS was performed for 30 min (pulse rate 25 Hz, pulse width 200 µs, and amplitude 1-10 mA) using a transcutaneous electric nerve stimulation eco2. During tVNS, the patients listened to notched music cleared of the frequency spectrum corresponding to the tinnitus with a 0.5 octave notch width.Entities:
Keywords: Music therapy; Tinnitus; Transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation; Vagus nerve stimulation
Year: 2015 PMID: 26771015 PMCID: PMC4704553 DOI: 10.7874/jao.2015.19.3.159
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Audiol Otol
Global improvement in tinnitus severity
Characteristics of tinnitus in all patients
In cases of bilateral tinnitus, characteristics of dominant side were included. *tinnitus awareness score is defined as the percentage of the time the patient is aware of tinnitus for a day. THI: Tinnitus Handicap Inventory, VAS: Visual Analogue Scale, BDI: Beck Depression Inventory
Treatment results in individual questionnaires
*time to symptom relief in terms of the number of treatment sessions in 15 subjects who reported symptom relief in the GI index. VAS: Visual Analogue Scale, GI: global improvement, ND: not determined
Fig. 1Global improvement (GI) index and change in Visual Analogue Scale (VAS) of tinnitus loudness (10-point), tinnitus awareness score (TAS, %), and Tinnitus Handicap Inventory (THI) score immediately after the end of the 10th session. Of the 30 patients, 15 patients reported an improvement in symptom (grade 5 and 6), 13 patients reported no change (grade 4), and 2 patients reported mild worsening of symptoms (grade 3). In 16/25 patients (64.0%), the VAS of tinnitus loudness decreased (i.e., improved), five patients (20.0%) reported no change in subjective loudness and 4 patients (16.0%) reported an increase in loudness. The tinnitus awareness score decreased (i.e., improved) in 13/25 patients (52.0%), was unchanged in 8/25 patients (32.0%), and increased in 4/25 patients (16.0%). The THI score decreased from baseline to after treatment in 11/24 patients (45.8%), was unchanged in 3 patients (12.5%), and worsened in 10 patients (41.7%).
Multiple linear regression analyses of various factors and global improvement after tinnitus treatment
*p<0.05. PTA: pure-tone average, VAS: Visual Analogue Scale, THI: Tinnitus Handicap Inventory
Fig. 2Time to symptom relief was not significantly correlated with the improvement (post score-pre score) in Visual Analogue Scale (VAS) of the tinnitus loudness, tinnitus awareness score (TAS), and Tinnitus Handicap Inventory (THI), or with the global improvement (GI) index in the 15 patients who reported improvements in their symptoms (all p>0.05).