Abstract

Tinnitus is attributed to partial sensory deafferentation resulting in a central maladaptive neuroplasticity. Unfortunately, the agent of deafferentation is usually unknown or irreversible. In patients with unilateral vestibular schwannoma (VS), however, the auditory nerve is affected by a benign tumor. Hence, removal of the tumor can cease the tinnitus. In turn, sustaining complaints after surgery indicate cortical neuroplasticity. The present study is a cross sectional study which aims to track cortical structural changes by surface-based morphometry in 46 VS patients with sustained (i.e. centralized) or ceased (i.e. peripheral) tinnitus after surgery. A volumetric analysis of cortical and subcortical gray matter (GM) anatomy was performed on preoperative high-resolution MRI and related to the presence of hearing impairment, pre- and/or postoperative tinnitus. Patients with sustained (i.e. chronic) tinnitus showed an increased GM volume of the bilateral caudate nucleus, the contralateral superior colliculus, the middle frontal and middle temporal gyrus, the fusiform gyrus as well as the ipsilateral pars orbitalis when compared to those patients in whom tinnitus ceased postoperatively. Chronic tinnitus in VS patients is associated with characteristic structural changes in frontal, temporal and subcortical areas. Notably, a significant GM change of the caudate nucleus was detected providing further support for the striatal gaiting model of tinnitus.

Highlights

  • Tinnitus is attributed to partial sensory deafferentation resulting in a central maladaptive neuroplasticity

  • The present study aims to track structural changes of gray matter depending on tinnitus outcome after vestibular schwannoma (VS) surgery

  • None of the patients suffered from deafness. 57% patients suffered from preoperative tinnitus which disappeared in 62% of the cases after surgical VS removal

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Tinnitus is attributed to partial sensory deafferentation resulting in a central maladaptive neuroplasticity. To evaluate volumetric gray matter (GM) changes related to sustained VS-associated tinnitus (susTN), we performed a surface-based morphometry on patients’ Patients with chronic tinnitus did not show any GM changes of the contralateral Heschl’s gyrus (1.3 × ­10–3 ± 0.6 × ­10–3 and 1.3 × ­10–3 ± 1.5 × ­10–3, ­F(1,44) = 0.05, p = 0.891; Fig. 3A).

Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call