Contralateral Suppression Of Teoae In Patients With Tinnitus and Normal Hearing

Abstract

Aim and Objectives : To evaluate functional integrity of Outer Hair Cells and Medial Olivocochlear system in the subjects having normal hearing with tinnitus and compare it with normal population and also to study the importance of Otoacoustic Emissions testing as an important objective tool in tinnitus evaluation. Methods and Materials: A total of 20 subjects in the age range of 18 years to 57 years were considered for the study. They were categorised into two groups such as experimental group and control group. Experimental group consisted of 14 subjects with normal hearing having unilateral or bilateral tinnitus. The control group consisted of 6 age matched subjects having normal hearing without any tinnitus. All the subjects of both the groups underwent Pure Tone Audiometry testing and tinnitus evaluation. TEOAE testing and Contralateral Suppression of TEOAE were carried out. Results: Among the 19 ears in the experimental group, TEOAE was absent in 10 ears (52.6%) and present in 9 ears (47.3%). Presence of contralateral suppression of TEOAE was observed in 6 ears (31.5%) and absence of contralateral suppression was noted in 13 ears (68.4%). It can be observed that most of patients in the experimental group had absent TEOAE and there is a subtle difference in the contralateral suppression of TEOAE between the experimental and control group. Conclusion: In conclusion abnormal OAE in patients with tinnitus having normal hearing sensitivity indicate the cochlear dysfunction. Absence of suppression indicates Medial Olivocochlear system dysfunction. We also suggest that other auditory structures and mechanisms apart from OHC and MOC system may also be the reason for tinnitus generation as the results included patients with normal OAE and Contralateral suppression of OAE.The study helps to understand the role of OAE measures in evaluating the functional integrity of Outer Hair Cells and MOC system in subjects having tinnitus with normal hearing. It also highlight about the role of MOC system and cochlea in the generation of tinnitus. Tinnitus represents one of the most common and distressing otologic problems which cause various somatic and psychological disorders that interfere with the quality of life [1]. Perception of sound in the ears or head that lacks an external acoustic source is commonly defined as tinnitus or ringing in the ears [2]. The majority of tinnitus patients have hearing loss but it can also occur in patients with normal hearing [3]. Several theories have been proposed for origin of tinnitus inspite of that the exact mechanism behind the generation of tinnitus is poorly understood. Tinnitus may be associated with abnormalities in any level of the auditory pathways. Jastreboff considers that the tinnitus is due to the maladaptive plasticity changes includes the enhanced central gain due to the compensatory increase in the central auditory activity in response to the loss of sensory input and the abnormal emotional reactions associated with the tinnitus. Several studies have investigated the relationship between tinnitus and dysfunction of the efferent auditory system mainly the Medial Olivocochlear System (MOC) by the suppression of otoacoustic emissions (OAEs). The Medial Olivocochlear System (MOC) is one of the efferent auditory system. The Medial Olivocochlear bundle arises from the neurons of the Medial Superior Olivary (MSO) nucleus complex and the Medial Nucleus of the Trapezoid Body (MNTB) and comprises of thick myelinated nerve fibres. About 75% of the fibers cross at the floor of fourth ventricle and terminate to the outer Hair Cells (OHCs) of the contralateral cochlea, while the rest of them remain uncrossed and terminate to the Outer Hair Cells (OHCs)of the ipsilateral cochlea. The fibers of the Olivocochlear bundle synapse directly at the basal surface of the Outer Hair Cells. The role of the efferent auditory system remains largely unknown. In view of preferential innervation of the OHCs by MOC system, it has been hypothesized that stimulation of Medial efferent alters IHC sensitivity indirectly by altering the micromechanical properties of the the OHCs. It is well established that length, tension and stiffness of the OHCs along their longitudinal axis are under the control of MOC bundle, thus enhancing the auditory sensitivity for low level stimuli at 30 to 40 dB SL. The Medial Olivocochlear bundle is mainly inhibitory. Hence there has been already suggestions that dysfunction of the efferent auditory system at any level auditory cortex to cochlea may be a basis for tinnitus generation [4]. The contralateral suppression of Otoacoustic Emissions (OAEs) could serve as an objective and non invasive clinical tool for exploration of the non-linear micromechanical of OHCs and clinical neurologic evaluation of the auditory brainstem especially the MOC system. The contralateral suppression of OAEs is performed by measuring OAE from the test ear while the contralateral ear is stimulated with noise. The difference in the OAE amplitude with and without contralateral noise stimulation is calculated . Negative value or zero indicate no suppression while positive values indicate suppression of OAEs . A cut off of 0.5 dB SPL is considered as suppression. The present study is aimed to evaluate functional integrity of OHC and MOC system in the subjects having normal hearing with tinnitus and compare it with normal population and also to study the importance of OAE testing as an important objective tool in tinnitus evaluation.

Authors and Affiliations

Kamala Sarathy, V. Jaya

Keywords

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  • EP ID EP572902
  • DOI 10.26717/BJSTR.2017.01.000492
  • Views 176
  • Downloads 0

How To Cite

Kamala Sarathy, V. Jaya (2017). Contralateral Suppression Of Teoae In Patients With Tinnitus and Normal Hearing. Biomedical Journal of Scientific & Technical Research (BJSTR), 1(6), 1582-1584. https://europub.co.uk./articles/-A-572902