| Literature DB >> 35735367 |
Alessandra Fioretti1, Eleonora Natalini1, Gianluigi Triggianese2, Rebecca Eibenstein1, Anna Maria Angelone2, Maria Lauriello2, Alberto Eibenstein1,2.
Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic and the lockdown measures are both causes of psychological distress. The aim of the current study was to evaluate the psychological effects of lockdown measures on patients with subjective chronic tinnitus diagnosed before the COVID-19 pandemic. A sample of n = 77 patients with chronic tinnitus was contacted by mail/phone for a survey between June 2021 and September 2021. All patients filled out questionnaires on tinnitus distress (Tinnitus Handicap Inventory, THI), anxiety (Beck Anxiety Inventory, BAI) and depression (Beck Depression Inventory, BDI) and eight items of the Tinnitus Sample Case History (TSCH) about tinnitus history (i.e., loudness, pitch, perception, tinnitus location), stress, and related conditions (noise annoyance, vertigo/dizziness, headache). Forty patients with chronic tinnitus filled out the survey. No significant differences of total THI mean scores (p > 0.05) were found compared to the results obtained before the COVID-19 pandemic and after lockdown. Regarding depression and anxiety, the female population showed a significant increase in scores obtained from the BDI (p < 0.0170) and the BAI (p < 0.049). Only two patients (0.5%) were infected by COVID-19 (positive RT-PCR), and they did not report any worsening of tinnitus. According to the data of the literature, our patients experienced a heterogeneous course of tinnitus, and the severity of tinnitus was not significantly affected by lifestyle changes during the COVID-19 pandemic and lockdown.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; anxiety; depression; lockdown; pandemic; stress; tinnitus
Year: 2022 PMID: 35735367 PMCID: PMC9220770 DOI: 10.3390/audiolres12030034
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Audiol Res ISSN: 2039-4330
Sociodemographic and clinical data before COVID-19 and after lockdown.
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| Tinnitus perception | |||||
| Constant | 27 | 67.5% | 32 | 80% |
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| Intermittent | 11 | 27.5% | 8 | 20% | |
| Missing | 2 | 5% | - | - | |
| Tinnitus location | |||||
| Only one ear (right or left) | 14 | 35% | 9 | 22.5% |
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| Both ears and inside the head | 26 | 65% | 31 | 77.5% | |
| | - | - | - | - | |
| Tinnitus loudness varying from day to day | 27 | 67.5% | 29 | 72,5% |
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| | 13 | 32.5% | 11 | 27.5% | |
| | - | - | - | - | |
| Stress effect | |||||
| Increased tinnitus | 26 | 65% | 31 | 77.5% |
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| No effect | 9 | 22.5% | 9 | 22.5% | |
| | 5 | 12.5% | - | - | |
| Tinnitus pitch | |||||
| Very high and high | 29 | 72.5% | 24 | 60% |
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| Medium and low | 9 | 22.5% | 16 | 40% | |
| | 2 | 5% | - | - | |
| Intolerance to sound | |||||
| Never rarely sometimes | 28 | 70% | 29 | 72.5% |
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| Often always | 9 | 22.5% | 11 | 27.5% | |
| | 3 | 7.5% | - | - | |
| Headache | 19 | 47.5% | 17 | 42.5% |
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| | 19 | 47.5% | 23 | 57.5% | |
| | 2 | 5% | - | - | |
| Vertigo/dizziness | 10 | 25% | 13 | 32.5% |
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| | 27 | 67.5% | 27 | 67.5% | |
| | 3 | 7.5% | - | - | |
* McNemar Test; ns = not significant.
Figure 1THI grades before COVID-19 and after lockdown.