Abstract

Objectives: In tinnitus, several brain regions seem to be structurally altered, including the medial partition of Heschl's gyrus (mHG), the site of the primary auditory cortex. The mHG is smaller in tinnitus patients than in healthy controls. The corpus callosum (CC) is the main interhemispheric commissure of the brain connecting the auditory areas of the left and the right hemisphere. Here, we investigate whether tinnitus status is associated with CC volume. Methods: The midsagittal cross-sectional area of the CC was examined in tinnitus patients and healthy controls in which an examination of the mHG had been carried out earlier. The CC was extracted and segmented into subregions which were defined according to the most common CC morphometry schemes introduced by Witelson (1989) and Hofer and Frahm (2006). Results: For both CC segmentation schemes, the CC posterior midbody was smaller in male patients than in male healthy controls and the isthmus, the anterior midbody, and the genou were larger in female patients than in female controls. With CC size normalized relative to mHG volume, the normalized CC splenium was larger in male patients than male controls and the normalized CC splenium, the isthmus and the genou were larger in female patients than female controls. Normalized CC segment size expresses callosal interconnectivity relative to auditory cortex volume. Conclusion: It may be argued that the predominant function of the CC is excitatory. The stronger callosal interconnectivity in tinnitus patients, compared to healthy controls, may facilitate the emergence and maintenance of a positive feedback loop between tinnitus generators located in the two hemispheres.

Highlights

  • Tinnitus is an auditory phantom sensation that is experienced in the absence of adequate acoustic stimulation

  • There were significant univariate effects. For both segmentation schemes the third segment was significantly smaller in tinnitus patients than in healthy controls (Witelson/Hofer and Frahm segment III: F(1,100) = 5.56, p < 0.02)

  • The present study revealed effects of tinnitus status on corpus callosum (CC) midsagittal segment surface area that were dependent on sex and, for females, on the segmentation scheme used, Witelson (1989) or Hofer and Frahm (2006)

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Summary

Introduction

Tinnitus is an auditory phantom sensation that is experienced in the absence of adequate acoustic stimulation. Tinnitus affects a considerable proportion of the general population, with a minority experiencing considerable distress (Hazell, 1990; Feldmann, 1998; Baguley and McFerran, 2002; Lockwood et al, 2002; Eggermont and Roberts, 2004; Shargorodsky et al, 2010). Several brain regions of tinnitus patients appear to be structurally altered, among them the thalamus and the nucleus accumbens (Mühlau et al, 2006), the inferior colliculus and the hippocampus (Landgrebe et al, 2009), and the medial partition of Heschl’s gyrus (mHG), the anatomical site of the primary auditory cortex (Schneider et al, 2009)

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