| Literature DB >> 29176873 |
Ji-Hye Han1, Joong Yeon Won2, Sung Kwang Hong1,2, Ja Hee Kim1, Eun Soo Kim3, Hyung-Jong Kim1,2, Hyo-Jeong Lee1,2.
Abstract
At present, there is no objective method for diagnosing subjective sensorineural tinnitus. Recently, the acoustic change complex (ACC) has been used to evaluate neural detection of sounds. Thus, the present study aimed to examine whether the ACC can reflect cortical detection and discrimination of sounds matched with tinnitus frequencies. We hypothesized that the ACC to change stimuli matched with tinnitus frequencies would be decreased in tinnitus patients because the tinnitus interferes with the perception of acoustic changes. To test the hypothesis, 96 ears of normal-hearing (NH) tinnitus patients and controls were tested. Among the tinnitus patients, 33 ears with a tinnitus frequency of 8 kHz constituted the tinnitus group, and the remaining 63 ears with no experience of tinnitus were allocated to the control group. For the 4 kHz non-tinnitus matched frequency, a subset of tinnitus (n = 17) and NH (n = 47) subjects was tested. The acoustic stimuli were pure tones with a total duration of 500 ms consisting of a 1 kHz tone in the first 250 ms and a second tone of either 8 kHz or 4 kHz in the latter 250 ms. The normalized amplitude of the ACC (naACC) was calculated separately for the amplitude of the N1'-P2' complex evoked by an 8 kHz or 4 kHz change stimulus and for the amplitude of the N1-P2 complex elicited by the initial 1 kHz background stimulus. Our results showed that the naACC to an 8 kHz stimulus in the tinnitus group was significantly smaller than those to 4 kHz and 8 kHz in normal controls. Additionally, in the tinnitus group, the naACC to 4 kHz was greater compared to 8 kHz. The receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve analysis conducted for naACC to 8 kHz at UCL revealed a fair degree of diagnostic efficacy. Overall, our results indicated that the ACC to a change stimulus matched with the tinnitus frequency can provide an objective measure of frequency-specific tinnitus.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 29176873 PMCID: PMC5703484 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0188268
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Stimulus paradigm and the representative waveforms in one tinnitus patient and a control.
The stimuli were 1 kHz pure tones with a 500 ms duration in addition to either an 8 kHz or 4 kHz pure tone during the latter half. Note that the auditory change complex was evoked by the change stimuli (either an 8 kHz or 4 kHz tone), which were followed by a 1 kHz onset response.
Demographic data, hearing thresholds, and stimulus intensity levels.
| All ears tested with an 8 kHz change stimulus | Ears tested with both 8k Hz and 4 kHz change stimuli | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tinnitus group | Control group | p-value | Tinnitus group | Control group | p-value | |
| 33 | 63 | 17 | 47 | |||
| 10:23 | 24:39 | 0.593 | 8:9 | 18:29 | 0.732 | |
| 13:20 | 35:28 | 0.197 | 7:10 | 25:22 | 0.571 | |
| 38.70 ± 14.72 | 37.70 ± 12.24 | 0.213 | 41.65 ± 15.33 | 39.47 ± 12.52 | 0.565 | |
| 10.83 ± 7.21 | 9.55 ± 7.56 | 0.425 | 11.47 ± 8.24 | 8.39 ± 6.66 | 0.130 | |
| 12.27 ± 5.74 | 12.38 ± 6.15 | 0.933 | 12.06 ± 7.08 | 11.49 ± 5.31 | 0.731 | |
| 11.67 ± 7.67 | 10.79 ± 7.42 | 0.590 | 12.06 ± 9.69 | 9.04 ± 6.22 | 0.245 | |
| 10.15 ± 8.15 | 10.00 ± 7.24 | 0.926 | 10.29 ± 9.91 | 8.40 ± 5.62 | 0.466 | |
| 10.15 ± 7.55 | 8.68 ± 10.54 | 0.479 | 10.00 ± 7.91 | 7.60 ± 11.21 | 0.420 | |
| 11.52 ± 8.70 | 9.52 ± 8.74 | 0.291 | 11.76 ± 10.15 | 8.62 ± 7.85 | 0.196 | |
| 11.52 ± 9.23 | 10.00 ± 8.61 | 0.426 | 13.82 ± 9.93 | 8.94 ± 7.87 | 0.045 | |
| 15.61 ± 12.10 | 12.70 ± 8.12 | 0.165 | 19.12 ± 13.83 | 12.34 ± 7.51 | 0.069 | |
| 19.24 ± 15.96 | 17.06 ± 10.11 | 0.416 | 22.35 ± 15.72 | 17.23 ± 10.10 | 0.224 | |
| - | - | 34.41 ± 12.36 | 36.17 ± 6.69 | 0.584 | ||
| 31.67 ± 11.90 | 31.03 ± 10.05 | 0.783 | 31.18 ± 12.44 | 31.28 ± 10.24 | 0.974 | |
| - | - | 60.88 ± 13.83 | 67.45 ± 7.44 | 0.078 | ||
| 60.76 ± 15.96 | 63.89 ± 9.77 | 0.308 | 57.65 ± 15.72 | 62.77 ± 10.10 | 0.224 | |
MCL, most comfortable loudness level; UCL, uncomfortable loudness level
*p < 0.05.
Fig 2Hearing thresholds from 0.125 to 8 kHz for the tinnitus and control groups.
Fig 3Pair-wise comparison of the naACC in ears tested with both 4 kHz and 8 kHz change stimuli in the control (n = 47) and tinnitus (n = 17) groups.
The naACCs evoked by an 8 kHz frequency matched stimuli in the tinnitus group were significantly decreased compared to 4 kHz non-frequency matched stimuli in the tinnitus group as well as the control group for all conditions.
Normalized amplitudes of the ACC to 4 kHz and 8 kHz change stimuli for ears tested with both stimuli.
| Group | Stimulation level | naACC to 4 kHz | naACC to 8 kHz |
|---|---|---|---|
| MCL | 0.60 ± 0.21 | 0.54 ± 0.17 | |
| UCL | 0.59 ± 0.26 | 0.39 ± 0.16 | |
| MCL | 0.57 ± 0.21 | 0.59 ± 0.28 | |
| UCL | 0.58 ± 0.23 | 0.57 ± 0.22 |
MCL, most comfortable loudness level; UCL, uncomfortable loudness level; naACC, normalized amplitude of auditory change complex.
Fig 4naACCs in response to 8 kHz at the MCL and UCL in the tinnitus and control groups.
Note that the naACCs in the control group were significantly greater compared to the tinnitus group.
Normalized amplitude of the ACC to 8 kHz change stimuli (mean ± s.d.).
| Tinnitus group (n = 33) | Control group (n = 63) | |
|---|---|---|
| 0.51 ± 0.25 | 0.58 ± 0.27 | |
| 0.41 ± 0.16 | 0.58 ± 0.23 |
MCL, most comfortable loudness level; UCL, uncomfortable loudness level.
Fig 5ROC curve analysis using the naACC in response to the 8 kHz change stimulus at the UCL.
The area under the ROC curve was 0.732 (p < 0.0001).