Basque Research Announces Successful Tinnitus Treatment
Editor: We've
been hearing about the effectiveness of Tinnitus Retraining Therapy for
some time, and new research is adding to the evidence that it can be very
effective. Here's the press release from the folks at Basque Research.
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It is estimated that between 10 and 17% of the
population has suffered tinnitus at some time in their lives, according to
a number of international studies. Tinnitus is understood as the
perception of noise in the ears or inside the head although there is no
external source of sound, without any vibratory cochlear activity taking
place (which occurs when an external noise is produced). Depending on the
intensity of the symptom, the patient may have their everyday life
affected. In extreme cases the discomforts may make working routines
impossible or negatively affect normal daily life.
Doctor Heitzmann has recommended TRT (Tinnitus
Retraining Therapy) treatment – based on the neurophysiological model -
for those suffering from tinnitus. She points out that it is a treatment
the aim of which is to get the patient to become accustomed to the
“noise”. To achieve this, therapeutic advice and sound therapy are used.
The father of TRT is professor Pawel J. Jastreboff,
who has defined tinnitus as a phantom auditory perception perceived only
by the person. On applying the neurophysiological model in the University
Hospital (of Navarre), Ms Heitzmann concluded that getting used to the
tinnitus and thereby, achieving the cessation of discomfort, occurred in
between 80 and 84% of patients, including, at times, a higher proportion.
It is the treatment that has the highest success rate currently.
Other therapeutic methods, such as pharmacological
ones, help to control the effects produced by tinnitus, such as anxiety
and stress, but do not solve the problem, itself. Surgical operations have
also shown to be of limited application for this disorder.
Various origins
Tinnitus may be triggered by various factors: from a
wax plug in the ear or infection in the middle ear, to hearing loss or a
benign tumour. Nevertheless, the origin of the problem mostly lies in the
ear itself and in the internal auditory passage.
Nevertheless, knowing the possible origin of the
tinnitus has not often been helpful in identifying its treatment. Ear
specialists must always undertake a diagnosis. But, in the case of
tinnitus, the diagnosis is more often than not one of exclusion. The
specialist has to discard other pathologies in order to discern if the
noises come from the ear itself or not.
On occasions, tinnituss appear accompanied by other
manifestations that oblige the intervention of various medical specialists
in order to contribute to relieving this symptom. This is why TRT
treatment is applied in the most appropriate way in those medical centres
equipped for all specialities; in this way, a multidisciplinary treatment
of the patient is achieved.
Getting used to noise
With the application of the TRT neurophysiological
model, what is important to know about the tinnitus is the manner in which
the noise is made, from the peripheral organ (the ear) to the cerebral
cortex. There is a series of structures in the central nervous system
(CNS) that gives the tinnitus a magnified role. This fact alerts the
patient and turn triggers the perception of auditory discomfort, according
to Ms Heitzmann. The limbic system, responsible for emotions and learning,
is then activated and the autonomous nervous system, which causes the
discomfort. It is at these levels that intervention can take place.
This is why the approach proposed by Jastreboff and
which we apply at the University Hospital is based on getting the patient
to become used to the noise to the point where the tinnitus ceases to be a
nuisance.
In this sense, the specialist believes that the
disappearance of the tinnitus in itself is not the important thing, given
that, on many occasions, we cannot avoid the ear hearing a noise or the
auditory canal transmitting it. Dr Heitzmann points out that when we speak
of “getting accustomed” to something, we mean ceasing to be conscious of
the presence of a stimulus, something which is achieved if we learn to
consider it irrelevant or not to take any notice of it.
It is something similar to the clothes we wear –
normally we are not constantly aware of what we have on and it does not
bother us. So, getting used to the noise is synonymous with ceasing to be
conscious of the tinnitus when one does not take any notice of it. Or,
when notice is taken of it, and so the tinnitus is perceived, it does not
cause discomfort or annoyance and is quickly forgotten.
Doctor Heitzmann considers that perceiving a tinnitus
does not mean anything of significance, once diagnosed and when it does
not present a vital risk to the patient and he or she does not need any
other treatment. This is confirmed by the fact that there are many who are
aware of tinnitus, but are not at all bothered by them. The well-known
experiment by Heller and Bergman in 1953 had already shown that all of us
perceive tinnitus in specific situations with no obvious illness involved
and, so, in principle, it is a symptom that is frequent and irrelevant.
Therapeutic Advice and Sound Therapy
In working on TRT, Jastreboff showed that the central
nervous system (CNS) has an elasticity and capacity for learning. The fact
the tinnitus generates annoyance means that the CNS processes it as an
important sound. We can teach the system to stop processing it at this
level of importance and leave it at a subconscious level. This goal is
achieved in two ways: therapeutic advice and sound therapy, fundamental
tools in TRT.
Through therapeutic advice, the specialist gives the
patient an explanation of what is happening and the cause of the
discomfort being triggered, always after undertaking an assessment using
questionnaires and clinical records, together with an auditory examination
and study and, if deemed necessary, with complementary tests. An overall
evaluation of the patient is essential.
The aim of therapeutic advice is to help to minimise
the importance of the tinnitus. It involves eliminating the negative
significance that makes the sound pass to a conscious level in the patient
and cause discomfort. In this way, “disconnecting” the limbic system is
achieved and the negative emotion or reaction is eliminated little by
little.
Therapeutic advice is carried out over a number of
interviews between the specialist and patient. Doctor Heitzmann underlines
the importance of these sessions, pointing out that, without these
interviews, sound therapy will not produce results.
The second TRT tool, sound therapy, arose from the
discovery that, depriving the auditory passage, designed for hearing, of
sound, tends to increase the sensitivity of the ear. In such a way that,
when a sound – such as a tinnitus - is produced in the passage, it
captures it straight away. To avoid this phenomenon, external sound is
introduced into the auditory canal, thus reducing the perception of the
tinnitus at a cortical level (in order to be less conscious of what there
is and distract attention away from the tinnitus by means of this external
sound).
Sound therapy, thus aims at helping the patient to
get used to the tinnitus, by incorporating external sound in such a way
that silence is always avoided. It has various levels of application. On
the one hand, all patients are advised to avoid silence at all times,
using this external source of sounds. Moreover, some patients require
sound generators that emit white (neutral) sound and that have to be
inserted in the ears for 8 hours a day, the noise never masking the
tinnitus. Other patients with auditory loss need an adaptaiton to the
headphones. The application of the therapy must always adapt to the
circumstances and needs of each person.
The time estimated in getting the patient accustomed
to the tinnitus and the disappearance of the discomfort depends on a
number of factors, such as how long the tinnitus has taken to evolve, the
psychological profile of the patient, personal circumstances that and
other pathologies. All these factors can contribute to the getting used to
the acufeno being achieved within a year, a year and a half or two years
(the average estimated period) although these times may be longer, due to
the factors mentioned. Not achieving the target in this time is thus not
considered a failure. To help in the process, monitoring is required
involving 5-6 clinical visits over 2 years, although this can vary
according to the individual.