| Literature DB >> 30314506 |
Sarah Michiels1,2,3,4, Annemarie Christien van der Wal5,6,7, Evelien Nieste5,6,7, Paul Van de Heyning6,7,8,9, Marc Braem10,11,12, Corine Visscher13, Vedat Topsakal6,7,9, Annick Gilles6,7,9,14, Laure Jacquemin6,7,9, Marianne Hesters11, Willem De Hertogh5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Tinnitus is a highly prevalent symptom affecting 10-15% of the adult population. It often affects patient quality of life and frequently causes distress. When subjective tinnitus can be elicited by the somatosensory system of the cervical spine or temporomandibular area it is termed somatic tinnitus. The first aim of the current study is to investigate the effect of the best evidence conservative temporomandibular disorder (TMD) treatment on tinnitus in patients with co-existence of tinnitus and TMD or oral parafunctions compared to no treatment. The second aim is to identify a subgroup of patients with tinnitus that benefits from the conservative temporomandibular joint treatment. METHODS ANDEntities:
Keywords: Occlusal splints; Physical therapy modalities; Somatic tinnitus; Somatosensory; Temporomandibular disorders
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30314506 PMCID: PMC6186065 DOI: 10.1186/s13063-018-2903-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trials ISSN: 1745-6215 Impact factor: 2.279
Inclusion and exclusion criteria
| Inclusion | Exclusion |
|---|---|
| Subjective tinnitus > 3 months | Clear otological or neurological causes of the tinnitus |
| AND one of the following present: | Severe depression |
| • Tinnitus association with manipulation of the teeth or jaw | Progressive middle ear pathology |
| • Temporal coincidence of onset or increase of both TMD pain and tinnitus | Intracranial pathology |
| • Increase of tinnitus during inadequate postures during rest, walking, working or sleeping | Traumatic cervical spine or temporomandibular injury in the past 6 months |
| • Intense bruxism and/or clenching periods during the day or night | Tumours |
| Previous surgery in the orofacial area | |
| Substance abuse that may affect the outcome measures | |
| TMD treatment is contra-indicated | |
| Already received TMD treatment in past 2 months |
TMD temporomandibular disorders
Fig. 1Delayed-start design (A: early-start group; B: delayed-start group; Q: Questionnaires; Exam.: full examination)
Overview of primary and secondary outcome measures
| Baseline | Follow-up | Measuring tool | Completed by | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Primary outcome measure | ||||
| Tinnitus-related distress | X | X | Tinnitus Questionnaire | Patient |
| Secondary outcome measure | ||||
| TMJ pain | X | X | TMD pain screener | Patient |
| Myalgia | X | X | DC/TMD | Researcher |
| Arthralgia | X | X | DC/ TMD | Researcher |
| Pressure sensitivity | X | X | Pressure algometer (Somedic), kPa | Researcher |
| Mouth opening | X | X | Ruler, cm | Researcher |
| Hearing loss | X | Pure Tone audiometry | Audiologist | |
| Psychoacoustic tinnitus analysis | X | X | Type of tinnitus, tinnitus pitch and tinnitus loudness | Audiologist |
| Tinnitus severity | X | Tinnitus Functional Index | Patient | |
| Subjective tinnitus loudness | X | X | Visual Analogue Scale (0–100 mm) | Patient |
| State of anxiety and depression | X | Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale | Patient | |
| Hyperacusis | X | Hyperacusis Questionnaire | Patient | |
| Auditory event-related potential | X | X | Auditory event-related potential | Researcher |
| General tinnitus characteristics such as duration of the complaints, localisation (unilateral, bilateral, central), somatic modulation, temporal relation with TMD, bruxism periods | X | Medical history | ENT | |
DC/TMD Diagnostic criteria for temporomandibular disorders, ENT ear-nose-throat, TMD temporomandibular disorders, TMJ temporomandibular joint