| Literature DB >> 33934235 |
Pia Brinkmann1, Sonja A Kotz2,3, Jasper V Smit4, Marcus L F Janssen5,6, Michael Schwartze2.
Abstract
Tinnitus is the perception of a 'ringing' sound without an acoustic source. It is generally accepted that tinnitus develops after peripheral hearing loss and is associated with altered auditory processing. The thalamus is a crucial relay in the underlying pathways that actively shapes processing of auditory signals before the respective information reaches the cerebral cortex. Here, we review animal and human evidence to define thalamic function in tinnitus. Overall increased spontaneous firing patterns and altered coherence between the thalamic medial geniculate body (MGB) and auditory cortices is observed in animal models of tinnitus. It is likely that the functional connectivity between the MGB and primary and secondary auditory cortices is reduced in humans. Conversely, there are indications for increased connectivity between the MGB and several areas in the cingulate cortex and posterior cerebellar regions, as well as variability in connectivity between the MGB and frontal areas regarding laterality and orientation in the inferior, medial and superior frontal gyrus. We suggest that these changes affect adaptive sensory gating of temporal and spectral sound features along the auditory pathway, reflecting dysfunction in an extensive thalamo-cortical network implicated in predictive temporal adaptation to the auditory environment. Modulation of temporal characteristics of input signals might hence factor into a thalamo-cortical dysrhythmia profile of tinnitus, but could ultimately also establish new directions for treatment options for persons with tinnitus.Entities:
Keywords: MGB; Medial geniculate nucleus; Prediction; Temporal processing; Tinnitus
Year: 2021 PMID: 33934235 PMCID: PMC8203542 DOI: 10.1007/s00429-021-02284-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Brain Struct Funct ISSN: 1863-2653 Impact factor: 3.270
Fig. 1Schematic and simplified representation of the classical and non-classical ascending auditory pathway. Ascending auditory signal travels from the ears to primary and secondary auditory cortices, while taking two different pathways. PAC primary auditory cortex, Non-PAC non-primary auditory cortices, CN cochlear nucleus, ICC central inferior colliculus, ICD dorsal inferior colliculus, ICX, external inferior colliculus, MGB medial geniculate body, MGD dorsal MGB, MGM medial MGB, MGV ventral MGB
Overview of MGB subdivisions and their functionality
| Ventral MGB | Medial MGB | Dorsal MGB | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Primary role in functional neuroanatomy | Auditory relay | Multisensory relay | Multisensory relay |
| Classical/non-classical auditory pathway | Classical | Non-classical | Non-classical |
| Input | Ipsilateral central nucleus of the IC | External IC, dorsal IC, central IC, lateral tegmentum, spinal cord, superior colliculus | Dorsal IC, tegmentum, sagulum, somatosensory system |
| Output | Ipsilateral primary auditory cortex (PAC) | Primary and secondary auditory cortices (PAC, non-PAC), lateral nucleus of the amygdala, non-auditory areas, striatum | Secondary auditory cortices (non-PAC, i.e., belt areas), lateral nucleus of the amygdala, non-auditory areas |
| Responses to sound | Sharp tuning curves, single-peaked, short tone latency, closely connected to the PAC | Heterogeneous tuning curves, spatial selectivity, short tone latency, fire at stimulus onset, associative learning responses (i.e., fear conditioning) | Wide, multipeaked tuning curves, short and long tone latency, sharp tuning curves, habituation and stimulus adaptation |
| Tonotopic organization | Yes | Yes (less than ventral MGB) | No |
| Tonotopic map | Low-to-high ( ventrolateral-dorsomedial) | NA | NA |
PAC primary auditory cortex, Non-PAC secondary non-primary auditory cortex, IC inferior colliculus, MGB medial geniculate body
Animal studies investigating the MGB in tinnitus
| Study | Subjects | Tinnitus induction | Tinnitus assessment | Paradigm | Method | Activity |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Brozoski et al. 2012 | 10 Ctrl, 10 Tin | Unilateral NT (1 h, band-limited noise) | Interrogative model | In vitro–spectroscopy | Proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy | Decrease GABA and glu in contralateral MGB |
| Su et al. ( | 6 Tin | Sodium salicylate | Reflexive model (GPIAS) | In vitro–single cell | Whole-cell patch-clamp | Decreased synaptic transmission (hyperpolarization resting membrane potential; decreased firing rates) |
| Kalappa et al. ( | 9 Ctrl, 6 Tin | Unilateral NT(1 h, octave band noise) | Reflexive model (GPIAS) | In vivo (awake) –single cell | Tetrode microdrives | Increased spontaneous firing in Tin, mean bursts per minute, mean spikes per burst and mean burst duration |
| Sametsky et al. ( | 10 Ctrl, 14 Tin, 4 non-Tin | Unilateral NT (1 h, octave band noise) | Reflexive model (PPI) | In vitro–single cell | Whole-cell patch-clamp | Increase in number of spikes per burst |
| Vianney-Rodrigues et al. ( | 10 Tin | Sodium salicylate | None | In vivo (anesthetized) –LFP | Microelectrode arrays | Decrease theta, alpha, beta, increased coherence in gamma |
| Barry et al. ( | 12 Ctrl, 16 Tin | Unilateral NT (2 h, pure tone) | Reflexive model (GPIAS, PPI)a | In vivo (anesthetized)–single cell | Microelectrodes | No differences for spontaneous firing rates between groups, increased bursting patterns in Tin, decreased percentages of spikes per burst in Tin |
| Van Zwieten et al. ( | 5 Ctrl, 9 Tin | Unilateral NT (1.5 h octave band noise) | Reflexive model (GPIAS)b | In vivo (anesthetized)–single cell and LFP | Microelectrode and bipolar electrode | Decrease in fast responding neurons, increase in non-responsive neurons, increased spontaneous firing in neurons of sustained and suppressed type, fast responding neurons did not change the spontaneous firing rate, in both groups: DBS suppressed thalamocortical synchronization in beta and gamma bands |
Ctrl, control animals, GABA gamma-aminobutyric acid, GPIAS gap–prepulse inhibition of the acoustic startle, Glu glutamate, LFP local field potential, non-Tin noise exposure but no tinnitus, NT noise trauma, PPI prepulse inhibition, Tin animals experiencing tinnitus
aTinnitus was assessed using the GPIAS and the PPI model on a subgroup n = 9 from the n = 16 Tin rats
bThe set-up did not allow valid discrimination between non-Tin and Tin animals
Human studies reporting effects on the auditory thalamus in tinnitus
| Study | Participants | Tinnitus duration | Tinnitus assessment | Control for HL | Paradigm | Method | Results auditory thalamus | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ctrl | Tin | |||||||
| M | 28 | 28 | > 4.5y | GHS | Yesa | Structural lesions | MRI | Increased gray matter concentration in the MGB in tinnitus |
| Sugiua et al. ( | 1450 | 743 | NA | Questionnaire | No | Structural lesions | MRI | Inverse association between cerebral infarction and tinnitus |
| Smits et al. ( | 10 | 7 BLTin, 22 LTin, 13 RTin | > 5y | Pitch matching | No | Task-based | fMRI | Symmetrical signal change in BLTin, Ltin decreased activation contralateral to Tin |
| Chen et al. ( | 32 | 32 | > 3.4y | THQ | Yes | Resting-state | fMRI (ALFF) | Decreased activity in bilateral thalamus |
| Zhang et al. ( | 33 | 31 | > 3.5y | THQ | Yesa | Resting-state | fMRI (VBM) | LThal = decrease in: MTG, mOFC, mFG,R PrecG, calcarine cortex; increase: angular gyrus, mCC, postCB; RThal = decrease in: STG, amygdala, SFG, L PrecG, mOG, increase: pCC, postCB; no changes in thalamic volume |
| Allan et al. ( | 55 | 73 | min. 6 months | THI or THQ | Yesb | Resting-state | fMRI (VBM, SBM) | Reduced white matter volume in the right MGB in severely affected tinnitus subgroup, reduced gray matter volume with increasing HL in the bilateral MGB; when comparing the subgroup Tin no HL vs HC, no effects in the MGB were found |
| Hofmeier et al. ( | 17 | 17 | > 4 weeks | GHS | Yesa | Resting-state/task-based | fMRI | Reduced connectivity in the left MGB in tinnitus, reduced sound-evoked response in the MGB in tinnitus |
| Han et al. ( | 27 | 27 | ≥ 6 months | THI | Yesa | Resting-state | fMRI (FCS) | Increased functional connectivity strength in the thalamus tinnitus compared to controls |
| Lv et al. ( | 25 | 25 | > 2y | THI | Yesa | Resting-state | fMRI | Increased connectivity between thalamus and IFG and ACC at baseline |
| Berlot et al. ( | 6 | 6 | > 0.5y | TQ | Yes | Resting-state/task-based | fMRI | Decreased connectivity starting at the MGB to higher auditory cortices |
| Aldhafeeri et al. ( | 14 | 14 | > 6y | THI | Yes | Resting-state | DTI | Decreased white matter integrity in persons with tinnitus in the anterior thalamic radiation |
| Benson et al. ( | 13 NIHL | 13 NIHL Tin | min. 6 months | THI | Yes | Resting-state | DTI | Four clusters in the anterior thalamic radiation reflected increased white matter integrity for NIHL Tin |
| Gunbey et al. ( | 20 | 18 TinHL, 18 Tin | > 4y | THI, VAS | Yes | Resting-state | DTI | Decreased connectivity in MGB in Tin patients |
| De Ridder et al. ( | – | 1 BLTin | 14y | VAS | No | Awake –resting-state | ECoG | Tinnitus-linked gamma-theta coupling, hypothesized to be influenced in thalamus |
| Sedley et al. ( | – | 1 BLTin | Approx. 15y | THI | No | Awake–task-based | ECoG | Tinnitus-linked delta oscillations, hypothesized to be triggered in thalamus |
ACC anterior cingulate gyrus, ALFF amplitude low-frequency fluctuations, BLTin bilateral tinnitus, Ctrl, Controls, DTI diffusion tensor imaging, ECoG electrocorticography, FCS functional connectivity strength, fMRI, functional magnetic resonance imaging, GHS Goebel–Hiller-Score tinnitus questionnaire, HC healthy controls, HL hearing loss, HQ hyperacusis questionnaire, IFG inferior frontal gyrus, LFP local field potentials, LTin left tinnitus, mCC medial cingulate cortex, mFG middle frontal gyrus, MGB medial geniculate body, mOFC medial orbitofrontal cortex, mOG middle occipital gyrus, MTG middle temporal gyrus, MRI magnetic resonance imaging, NIHL noise-induced hearing loss, postCB posterior cerebellum, PrecG precentral gyrus, RTin right tinnitus, SBM surface-based morphometry, STG superior temporal gyrus, THI tinnitus handicap inventory, Tin tinnitus, TinHL tinnitus with hearing loss, THQ tinnitus handicap questionnaire, TQ tinnitus questionnaire, VAS visual analog scale, VBM voxel-based morphometry
aIn addition, controlled for hyperacusis
bForming subgroups from the original sample
Fig. 2Summary and schematic representation of increased/decreased functional connectivity measures between the MGB and cortical areas. The representation is based on baseline measures of Lv et al. (2020), Berlot et al. (2020), and Zhang et al. (2015). Depicted are only areas with altered connections to the bilateral MGB. Zhang et al. (2015) observed decreased connectivity between the left thalamus to the medial frontal gyrus and the right thalamus and superior frontal gyrus, contrasting with increased connectivity between the MGB and the IFG (BA 45) by Lv et al. (2020). Zhang et al. (2015) further observed increased connectivity between the left thalamus and the middle cingulate cortex, and the right thalamus and the posterior cingulate cortex. ACC, Anterior cingulate cortex (BA 33), PAC, Primary auditory cortex, Non-PAC, Non-Primary auditory cortices, IFG, Inferior frontal gyrus, MGB, Medial geniculate body, PostCB, Posterior cerebellum. Lv et al. (2020), Berlot et al. (2020), Zhang et al. (2015)
Fig. 3Schematic representation of the neural architecture for specific temporal prediction in persons without tinnitus a and with tinnitus b. Here, the ascending auditory pathway does not distinguish between the classical and the non-classical auditory pathway. The schema does not depict predictive top–down modulation of the network by dynamic input. The MGB forms a major hub in transmitting a timing signal to higher cortical areas (event-/beat-based temporal processing (red)). This signal forms the basis for interval-based temporal processing (green) in BG circuits. Parallel activation and integration of memory representations recruit connections between temporal and frontal cortices (blue). In tinnitus (B), connections between the MGB and auditory cortices are reduced. Starting from the MGB, increased burst and spontaneous firing leads to an increase in event-/beat-based temporal processing. Tonic firing is proposed to be reduced, reflected by decreased interval-based temporal processing, as depicted by the different arrow sizes + and – signs. In severe deafferentiation, memory retrieval increasingly relies on parahippocampal and auditory areas. PAC/Non-PAC primary and non-primary auditory cortices, BG basal ganglia, CB cerebellum, CN cochlear nucleus, FC frontal cortex, IC inferior colliculus, MGB medial geniculate body