Tuesday, March 29, 2016

The Zen of Tinnitus Acceptance

In the 1980s I absolutely loved punk rock. I lived in Greensboro, N.C. and struggling punker bands traveling from Atlanta to D.C. for weekend gigs would unload their equipment-filled vans into tiny bars for mid-week performances to pay for gas money for the trip. I would move toward the stage to listen to the raging of tatted, bare-chested men, roaring like aircraft engines, their words almost impossible to decipher. You didn’t need to. You didn’t listen to this music. You felt it. Now in my late ‘60s guess what I get? Can you say “tinnitus”? When it first showed up a decade or so ago I began wearing earplugs, closing doors quietly, and avoiding loud noises in the hopes that at least I could prevent further damage and perhaps turn down the volume a bit. It didn’t work. The stuff the audiol…

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Sunday, March 27, 2016

The neural correlates of cognitive dysfunction in phantom sounds.

In conclusion, these results support for the first time the notion that cognitive changes in tinnitus patients are associated with changes in hippocampal activity as well as the anterior cingulate and insula. PMID: 27016059 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher] (Source: Brain Research)

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Wednesday, March 23, 2016

Chronic Cervicogenic Tinnitus Rapidly Resolved by Intermittent Use of Cervical Collar

Karl Bechter, Martin Wieland, Gerhard F. Hamann (Source: Frontiers in Psychiatry)

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Validation of PRISM (Pictorial Representation of Illness and Self Measure) as a novel visual assessment tool for the burden of suffering in tinnitus patients

Chronic subjective tinnitus is a frequent condition that affects the subject’s quality of life. The lack of objective measures of tinnitus necessitates the use of self-reporting and often time-consuming questi… (Source: Health and Quality of Life Outcomes)

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Endovascular Interventions for Idiopathic Intracranial Hypertension and Venous Tinnitus

Publication date: Available online 22 March 2016 Source:Neuroimaging Clinics of North America Author(s): Ferdinand K. Hui, Todd Abruzzo, Sameer A. AnsariTeaser Pulsatile tinnitus from intracranial venous abnormalities is an uncommon cause of pulse synchronous tinnitus. Endovascular therapies may have applications in many of these disease conditions. They have the advantage of being minimally invasive and may selectively eliminate the site of turbulence. Venous stenting has been used successfully to treat venous stenoses with low complication rates and high success rates in patients with idiopathic intracranial hypertension though randomized controlled data are lacking. Careful exclusion of other causes of tinnitus should be performed before consideration for surgical or endovascular t…

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Tinnitus

Publication date: Available online 22 March 2016 Source:Neuroimaging Clinics of North America Author(s): Suresh K. Mukherji (Source: Neuroimaging Clinics of North America)

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Endovascular Interventions for Idiopathic Intracranial Hypertension and Venous Tinnitus

Pulsatile tinnitus from intracranial venous abnormalities is an uncommon cause of pulse synchronous tinnitus. Endovascular therapies may have applications in many of these disease conditions. They have the advantage of being minimally invasive and may selectively eliminate the site of turbulence. Venous stenting has been used successfully to treat venous stenoses with low complication rates and high success rates in patients with idiopathic intracranial hypertension though randomized controlled data are lacking. Careful exclusion of other causes of tinnitus should be performed before consideration for surgical or endovascular treatment of presumed causative lesions of venous tinnitus. (Source: Neuroimaging Clinics)

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