Study Suggests Tinnitus is Not Highly Inherited
February 2010
Here's a report on an interesting study done by some researchers in
Norway. Their data indicates that tinnitus is not highly inherited. I'd
never considered that possibility before, but after reading the report I'm
wondering why it isn't more inheritable!
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Tinnitus does not appear to be a highly inherited condition (ie, does
not pass frequently from parents to offspring), according to a report in
the February issue of Archives of Otolaryngology-Head & Neck Surgery, one
of the JAMA/Archives Journals.
"Tinnitus, or the perception of sound without an external acoustic
stimulus, is a common but poorly understood symptom," the authors write as
background information in the article. "Although the list of factors
associated with tinnitus is long, the causes of tinnitus onset and
tinnitus maintenance are far from fully understood, and attempts to
develop evidence-based therapies have been thwarted by a poor
understanding of the pathophysiology of the condition." Tinnitus has
recently been reported to cluster in families, but little is known about
the importance of genetic effects in susceptibility to the condition.
Ellen Kvestad, MD, PhD, of the Norwegian Institute of Public Health,
Oslo, and Akershus University Hospital, Akershus, Norway, and colleagues
analyzed data collected from 12,940 spouses, 27,607 parents and offspring,
and 11,498 siblings. All participants completed a questionnaire about
tinnitus and underwent a hearing examination. A subgroup of 16,186
individuals with some hearing loss and 17,785 controls were sent a second
questionnaire requesting more details about tinnitus, to which a total of
28,066 responded.
About 20.9% of the participants reported having definite or probable
symptoms of tinnitus. On a scale of negative one to one-where negative one
would indicate that offspring always had tinnitus if their parents did
not, and one would indicate that both parents and offspring always had
tinnitus-correlations for tinnitus ranged from 0.01 to 0.07 for parents
and offspring, depending on [Bleep] differences. The correlation between
siblings ranged from 0.06 to 0.14 and the spouse correlation was 0.04.
Although the data did not distinguish between types of tinnitus-some of
which may be more heritable than others-the low overall correlation does
not indicate that any prevalent type of tinnitus is largely passed down
through families. "This result needs to be replicated with other measures
of tinnitus and other types of family data," the authors write.
"Our results do not necessarily mean that genetic effects are
unimportant for all forms of tinnitus, because this symptom can arise from
a wide variety of underlying diseases," they conclude. "Considering the
heterogeneous origin of tinnitus, rather than searching for the genes
responsible for tinnitus in general, future investigators need to identify
subgroups of individuals affected by tinnitus with specific causes. Our
results do not support the spending of large amounts of time and resources
to identify the genes that code for tinnitus in general."
The study was funded by the National Institute on Deafness and Other
Communication Disorders, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Md.