| Literature DB >> 30213235 |
Sarah Michiels1,2,3, Tanit Ganz Sanchez4,5, Yahav Oron6, Annick Gilles2,3,7, Haúla F Haider8, Soly Erlandsson9, Karl Bechter10, Veronika Vielsmeier11, Eberhard Biesinger12, Eui-Cheol Nam13, Jeanne Oiticica5, Ítalo Roberto T de Medeiros5, Carina Bezerra Rocha5, Berthold Langguth14, Paul Van de Heyning2,3,15, Willem De Hertogh1, Deborah A Hall16,17,18,19.
Abstract
Since somatic or somatosensory tinnitus (ST) was first described as a subtype of subjective tinnitus, where altered somatosensory afference from the cervical spine or temporomandibular area causes or changes a patient's tinnitus perception, several studies in humans and animals have provided a neurophysiological explanation for this type of tinnitus. Due to a lack of unambiguous clinical tests, many authors and clinicians use their own criteria for diagnosing ST. This resulted in large differences in prevalence figures in different studies and limits the comparison of clinical trials on ST treatment. This study aimed to reach an international consensus on diagnostic criteria for ST among experts, scientists and clinicians using a Delphi survey and face-to-face consensus meeting strategy. Following recommended procedures to gain expert consensus, a two-round Delphi survey was delivered online, followed by an in-person consensus meeting. Experts agreed upon a set of criteria that strongly suggest ST. These criteria comprise items on somatosensory modulation, specific tinnitus characteristics, and symptoms that can accompany the tinnitus. None of these criteria have to be present in every single patient with ST, but in case they are present, they strongly suggest the presence of ST. Because of the international nature of the survey, we expect these criteria to gain wide acceptance in the research field and to serve as a guideline for clinicians across all disciplines. Criteria developed in this consensus paper should now allow further investigation of the extent of somatosensory influence in individual tinnitus patients and tinnitus populations.Entities:
Keywords: Delphi survey; face-to-face consensus; somatic; somatosensory; tinnitus
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30213235 PMCID: PMC6144502 DOI: 10.1177/2331216518796403
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trends Hear ISSN: 2331-2165 Impact factor: 3.293
Overview of the “Long List” of 41 Potential Diagnostic Criteria.
| References | Potential diagnostic criterion | Voting results consensus meeting |
|---|---|---|
| The patient is able to modulate the tinnitus by voluntary movements of the head or neck. | 100% inclusion | |
| The patient is able to modulate the tinnitus by voluntary movements of the jaw | 100% inclusion | |
| The patient is able to modulate the tinnitus by eye movements | 100% inclusion | |
| The patient is able to modulate the tinnitus by clenching the teeth | 100% inclusion | |
| Tinnitus is modulated by pressure on myofascial trigger points | 100% inclusion | |
| Tinnitus is modulated by resistance tests of the cervical spine (somatic maneuvers) | 100% inclusion | |
| Tinnitus is modulated by resistance tests of the jaw (somatic maneuvers) | 100% inclusion | |
|
| Tinnitus is modulated by resistance tests of the arm (somatic maneuvers) | 100% “can be present occasionally” |
| Tinnitus is accompanied by frequent pain in the cervical spine, head or shoulder girdle | 100% inclusion | |
|
| Tinnitus is accompanied by muscular tension of the upper posterior cervical muscles of the head-neck transition | 100% inclusion |
| Tinnitus is accompanied by temporomandibular disorders (pain in the jaw or masticatory muscles) | 100% inclusion | |
|
| Tinnitus is accompanied by signs of osteophytes or spondylosis on radiography | 100% exclusion |
|
| Tinnitus is accompanied by the presence of pressure tender myofascial trigger points | 100% inclusion |
|
| Tinnitus is accompanied by dental diseases | 75% inclusion 25% exclusion |
| Tinnitus and pain symptoms aggravate simultaneously | 100% inclusion | |
|
| Tinnitus is accompanied by poor body posture | 100% exclusion |
| Tinnitus is accompanied by bruxism | 100% inclusion | |
|
| Tinnitus is accompanied by teeth clenching | 100% inclusion |
|
| Presence of a pulsatile tinnitus, not synchronous with the heartbeat | 100% “can be present occasionally” |
|
| Tinnitus loudness is reported to vary from day to day | 100% inclusion |
| Tinnitus is preceded by a head or neck trauma | 100% inclusion | |
| Tinnitus increases during bad postures (while resting, walking, working or sleeping) | 100% inclusion | |
|
| Tinnitus is maskable by music or sounds | 100% exclusion |
| Tinnitus and pain complaints appeared simultaneously | 100% inclusion | |
| Tinnitus is accompanied by malocclusion of the teeth | 100% “can be present occasionally” | |
|
| Tinnitus is accompanied by oral parafunctions (such as: bruxism, teeth clenching, biting nails, . . . ) | Item is covered by including bruxism and teeth clenching |
|
| Tinnitus is accompanied by muscular dysfunction of the masticatory area | Item is covered by including temporomandibular disorders |
|
| Tinnitus is accompanied by noises of the temporomandibular joint | Item is covered by including temporomandibular disorders |
|
| Tinnitus is accompanied by palpation pain in the masticatory muscles | Item is covered by including temporomandibular disorders |
|
| Tinnitus is accompanied by fascial dysesthesia (such as a tingling or numb feeling in the face) | 100% “can be present occasionally” |
|
| Tinnitus is accompanied by deficits in eye fixation, smooth pursuit tests or optokinetic nystagmus | 100% exclusion |
|
| Tinnitus is low pitched (<1000 Hz) | 100% exclusion |
|
| Constant pulsatile tinnitus, synchronous with the heartbeat, that can momentarily be abolished by a strong muscle contraction of the head or neck or a strong pressure applied to the same muscles | 40% inclusion and 60% exclusion |
|
| In case of a unilateral tinnitus, the audiogram does not account for unilateral tinnitus (e.g.,: normal audiogram, symmetric hearing loss or hearing loss greater in the contralateral ear) | 100% inclusion |
| Suggested by panel | Patient indicates a relationship between the sleep quality at night and the tinnitus during the day | 100% “can be present occasionally” |
| Suggested by panel | Taking a nap during the day affects the tinnitus | 60% inclusion and 40% exclusion |
| Suggested by panel | Tinnitus is accompanied by increased muscle tension in the suboccipital muscles | 100% inclusion |
| Suggested by panel | Tinnitus appearance is preceded by orthodontic procedures | 60% inclusion and 40% exclusion |
| Suggested by panel | Tinnitus is intermittent or has large fluctuations in loudness | 100% inclusion |
| Suggested by panel | Soft unilateral tinnitus or loud tinnitus throughout the head | 100% “can be present occasionally” |
| Suggested by panel | Tinnitus is accompanied by lack of molar support | 100% exclusion |
Figure 1.Overview of the inclusion process of articles in the systematic review.
Items on Tinnitus Modulation That, If Present, Strongly Suggest Somatosensory Influence of Tinnitus.
| Criteria on tinnitus modulation |
|---|
| The patient is able to modulate the tinnitus by voluntary movement of the head, neck, jaw or eyes |
| The patient is able to modulate the tinnitus by somatic maneuvers |
| Tinnitus is modulated by pressure on myofascial trigger points |
Tinnitus Characteristics That, If Present, Strongly Suggest Somatosensory Influence of Tinnitus.
| Tinnitus characteristics |
|---|
| Tinnitus and neck or jaw pain complaints appeared simultaneously |
| Tinnitus and neck/jaw pain symptoms aggravate simultaneously |
| Tinnitus is preceded by a head or neck trauma |
| Tinnitus increases during bad postures |
| Tinnitus pitch, loudness and/or location are reported to vary |
| In case of unilateral tinnitus, the audiogram does not account for unilateral tinnitus |
Accompanying Symptoms That, If Present, Strongly Suggest Somatosensory Influence of Tinnitus.
| Accompanying symptoms |
|---|
| Tinnitus is accompanied by frequent pain in the cervical spine, head or shoulder girdle |
| Tinnitus is accompanied by the presence of pressure tender myofascial trigger points |
| Tinnitus is accompanied by increased muscle tension in the suboccipital muscles |
| Tinnitus is accompanied by increased muscle tension in the extensor muscles of the cervical spine |
| Tinnitus is accompanied by temporomandibular disorders |
| Tinnitus is accompanied by teeth clenching or bruxism |
| Tinnitus is accompanied by dental diseases |