Abstract
The occurrence of tinnitus is associated with hearing loss and neuroplastic changes in the brain, but disentangling correlation and causation has remained difficult in both human and animal studies. Here we use earplugs to cause a period of monaural deprivation to induce a temporary, fully reversible tinnitus sensation, to test whether differences in subcortical changes in neural response gain, as reflected through changes in acoustic reflex thresholds (ARTs), could explain the occurrence of tinnitus.Forty-four subjects with normal hearing wore an earplug in one ear for either 4 (n = 27) or 7 days (n = 17). Thirty subjects reported tinnitus at the end of the deprivation period. ARTs were measured before the earplug period and immediately after taking the earplug out. At the end of the earplug period, ARTs in the plugged ear were decreased by 5.9 ± 1.1 dB in the tinnitus-positive group, and by 6.3 ± 1.1 dB in the tinnitus-negative group. In the control ear, ARTs were increased by 1.3 ± 0.8 dB in the tinnitus-positive group, and by 1.6 ± 2.0 dB in the tinnitus-negative group. There were no significant differences between the groups with 4 and 7 days of auditory deprivation.Our results suggest that either the subcortical neurophysiological changes underlying the ART reductions might not be related to the occurrence of tinnitus, or that they might be a necessary component of the generation of tinnitus, but with additional changes at a higher level of auditory processing required to give rise to tinnitus. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: Hearing Loss, Tinnitus, Hyperacusis, Central Gain.
Highlights
The occurrence of tinnitus, a phantom auditory sensation, is correlated with cochlear damage, neuroplastic changes in the central auditory system, and changes in spontaneous neuronal activity (Roberts et al, 2010; Baguley et al, 2013; Schaette, 2013; Shore et al, 2016)
We have recently demonstrated that wearing an earplug in one ear for several days reliably and fully reversibly induces the perception of tinnitus in the majority of subjects, and the descriptions of the tinnitus sounds were similar to those used by tinnitus patients to describe their auditory phantom (Schaette et al, 2012)
At the end of the earplug period, 30 participants reported experiencing tinnitus sounds at the time of acoustic reflex thresholds (ARTs) measurement
Summary
The occurrence of tinnitus, a phantom auditory sensation, is correlated with cochlear damage, neuroplastic changes in the central auditory system, and changes in spontaneous neuronal activity (Roberts et al, 2010; Baguley et al, 2013; Schaette, 2013; Shore et al, 2016). It has yet to be clarified which of the changes in the central auditory system might be necessary for the development of tinnitus, and which might be unrelated consequences of hearing loss. The presence of tinnitus has been linked to changes in the spontaneous neuronal activity in the central auditory system.
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