Electroencephalographic evaluation of acoustic therapies for the treatment of chronic and refractory tinnitus.

Q2 Medicine BMC Ear, Nose and Throat Disorders Pub Date : 2017-11-28 eCollection Date: 2017-01-01 DOI:10.1186/s12901-017-0042-z
Luz María Alonso-Valerdi, David I Ibarra-Zarate, Francisco J Tavira-Sánchez, Ricardo A Ramírez-Mendoza, Manuel Recuero
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引用次数: 10

Abstract

Background: To date, a large number of acoustic therapies have been applied to treat tinnitus. The effect that produces those auditory stimuli is, however, not well understood yet. Furthermore, the conventional clinical protocol is based on a trial-error procedure, and there is not a formal and adequate treatment follow-up. At present, the only way to evaluate acoustic therapies is by means of subjective methods such as analog visual scale and ad-hoc questionnaires.

Methods: This protocol seeks to establish an objective methodology to treat tinnitus with acoustic therapies based on electroencephalographic (EEG) activity evaluation. On the hypothesis that acoustic therapies should produce perceptual and cognitive changes at a cortical level, it is proposed to examine neural electrical activity of patients suffering from refractory and chronic tinnitus in four different stages: at the beginning of the experiment, at one week of treatment, at five weeks of treatment, and at eight weeks of treatment. Four of the most efficient acoustic therapies found at the moment are considered: retraining, auditory discrimination, enriched acoustic environment, and binaural.

Discussion: EEG has become a standard brain imaging tool to quantify and qualify neural oscillations, which are basically spatial, temporal, and spectral patterns associated with particular perceptual, cognitive, motor and emotional processes. Neural oscillations have been traditionally studied on the basis of event-related experiments, where time-locked and phase-locked responses (i.e., event-related potentials) along with time-locked but not necessary phase-locked responses (i.e., event-related (de) synchronization) have been essentially estimated. Both potentials and levels of synchronization related to auditory stimuli are herein proposed to assess the effect of acoustic therapies.

Trial registration: Registration Number: ISRCTN14553550. ISRCTN Registry: BioMed Central. Date of Registration: October 31st, 2017.

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声学疗法治疗慢性难治性耳鸣的脑电图评价。
背景:迄今为止,大量的声学疗法已被用于治疗耳鸣。然而,产生这些听觉刺激的效果还没有被很好地理解。此外,传统的临床方案是基于试错程序,没有正式和充分的治疗随访。目前,评价声疗法的唯一方法是通过模拟视觉量表和特设问卷等主观方法。方法:本方案旨在建立一种基于脑电图(EEG)活动评估的声学疗法治疗耳鸣的客观方法。基于声学治疗应该在皮层水平上产生感知和认知变化的假设,我们建议在实验开始时、治疗一周时、治疗五周时和治疗八周时四个不同阶段检测难治性和慢性耳鸣患者的神经电活动。目前发现的四种最有效的听觉疗法被认为是:再训练,听觉辨别,丰富的听觉环境和双耳。讨论:脑电图已成为一种标准的脑成像工具,用于量化和鉴定神经振荡,这些振荡基本上是与特定感知、认知、运动和情绪过程相关的空间、时间和频谱模式。传统上,神经振荡是在事件相关实验的基础上进行研究的,其中时间锁定和锁相响应(即事件相关电位)以及时间锁定但不必要的锁相响应(即事件相关(去)同步)已经基本上得到了估计。本文提出了与听觉刺激相关的电位和同步水平来评估听觉治疗的效果。试验注册:注册号:ISRCTN14553550。ISRCTN注册中心:BioMed Central。注册日期:2017年10月31日。
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来源期刊
BMC Ear, Nose and Throat Disorders
BMC Ear, Nose and Throat Disorders Medicine-Otorhinolaryngology
CiteScore
3.30
自引率
0.00%
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0
期刊介绍: BMC Ear, Nose and Throat Disorders is an open access journal publishing original peer-reviewed research articles in all aspects of the prevention, diagnosis and management of ear, nose and throat disorders, as well as related molecular genetics, pathophysiology, and epidemiology. BMC Ear, Nose and Throat Disorders (ISSN 1472-6815) is indexed/tracked/covered by PubMed, CAS, EMBASE, Scopus and Google Scholar.
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