Abstract

In 62 patients, whose hearing acuity was normal or profoundly impaired, tinnitus suppression was attempted through electrical promontory stimulation (EPS) with a Promontory Stimulator (Cochlear Co.). The causes of tinnitus were idiopathic sudden deafness, ototoxicity, noise induced hearing loss, labyrinthitis, Meniere's disease, acoustic neuroma and unknown origin. Reduction of tinnitus was achieved in 46 of 68 ears (67.6%). Of these, EPS was most effective in cases of noise induced hearing loss (100.0%; 3/3), followed by those of idiopathic sudden deafness (87.5%; 14/16), Meniere's disease (83.3%; 5/6), labyrinthitis (75.0%; 6/8), ototoxicity (66.6%; 4/6) and unknown origin (76.4%; 13/17). The treatment had hardly any effect on patients with acoustic neuroma (8.3%; 1/12). Twenty patients reported residual inhibition with a duration ranging from several hours to one week. Our results suggest that tinnitus due to cochlear lesions can be suppressed by EPS. This technique may also be useful for differentiation between tinnitus resulting from cochlear lesions and from retrocochlear lesions.

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