This book describes the theoretical background of the different forms of tinnitus (ringing in the ears) and detailed knowledge of state-of-the-art treatments of tinnitus. Tinnitus has many forms, and the severity ranges widely from being non-problematic to severely affecting a person’s daily life. How loud the tinnitus is perceived does not directly relate to how much it distresses the patient. Thus, even tinnitus very close to the hearing threshold can be a disabling symptom. It can reduce the quality of life by generating anxiety and concentration problems, impairing the ability to do intellectual work, making it difficult to sleep, causing depression and sometimes even leading to suicide.
Textbook of Tinnitus has filled a void by providing a comprehensive overview about the different forms of tinnitus, their pathophysiology and their treatment. However, since the publication of the first edition of the Textbook of Tinnitus in 2011, tinnitus research has dramaticallyevolved. In view of the substantial increase in knowledge, most chapters in this second edition are newly written and a few original chapters have had major updates. This edition has nine sections, covering the basics of tinnitus, the neurobiology of tinnitus, pathophysiological models, animal research, diagnosis and assessment, various forms of management and treatment, and finally, a look at the future of tinnitus and tinnitus research.
The book will be of great interest to otolaryngologists, neurologists, psychiatrists, neurosurgeons, primary care clinicians, audiologists and psychologists, and students. Because of its organization and its extensive subject index, Textbook of Tinnitus, Second Edition can also serve as a reference for clinicians who do not treat tinnitus patients routinely.
Part
1. Basics about Tinnitus.-
1. History of tinnitus.-
2. Tinnitus,
Tinnitus disorder and other phantom perceptions.-
3. Hypersensitivity to
sounds.-
4. Epidemiology of Tinnitus: frequency of the condition.-
5. Genetic
contribution to tinnitus and tinnitus disorder.- 6.- Environmental and
occupational risk factors for tinnitus.-
7. Tinnitus heterogeneity, different
types of tinnitus, and gender aspects.-
8. Similarities Between Tinnitus and
Pain.- Part
2. Neurobiology of tinnitus.-
9. Anatomy and Physiology of the
Auditory System.-
10. Cochlear Changes after Noise Trauma.-
11. Molecular
Biology of the Central Auditory System and Tinnitus.-
12. Tinnitus and the
somatosensory system.-
13. The Role of Auditory Deprivation.-
14.
Neuroplasticity of the auditory system.-
15. Structural and functional MRI
based neuroimaging in tinnitus.-
16. The electrophysiological explorations in
tinnitus over the decades using EEG and MEG.- Part
3. Pathophysiological
Models.-
17. The Bayesian brain and tinnitus.-
18. Central gain model for
tinnitus: A review on noise-induced plasticity or When less at the periphery
is more in the center.-
19. The Frontostriatal Gating Model of Tinnitus.-
20.
The Neurophysiological Model of Tinnitus and Decreased Sound Tolerance.-
21.
Psychological models of tinnitus.-
22. Neuroinflammation Model of Tinnitus.-
Part
4. Animal research for tinnitus.-
23. Animal Models of Hyperacusis:
Neural Hyperactivity in Auditory, Emotional, Arousal, Memory and Motor
Networks.-
24. Translating animal findings to humans in tinnitus research.-
Part
5. Diagnosis and Assessment.
25. Diagnosis and Flowchart.-
26. Tinnitus
History Taking.
27. Tinnitus Questionnaires.-
28. Clinical
otorhinolaryngological assessment.-
29. Audiological Assessment for
Tinnitus.-
30. Clinical neuroimaging in the evaluation of tinnitus.-
31.
Clinical Assessment of the Somatosensory System.- Part
6. Management of
specific forms of tinnitus.
32. Conductive and sensorineural hearing
loss.-33. Menieres Disease, a set of rare disorders with tinnitus.-
34.
Tinnitus and vestibular schwannoma.-
35. Microvascular compression of the
vestibulocochlear nerve.-
36. Tinnitus and Cerebrovascular Diseases.-
37.
Cervical and masticatory somatosensory system.-
38. Trauma-associated
tinnitus.-
39. Tinnitus in children and adolescents.-
40. Pulsatile
tinnitus.-
41. Hyperacusis and tinnitus.-
42. Tinnitus and psychiatric
co-morbidity. PART VII. Tinnitus management.-
43. Tinnitus Counselling and
Psychoeducation.-
44. CBT for tinnitus.-
45. Mindfulness and Tinnitus.- 46.-
Auditory treatments of tinnitus.-
47. Tinnitus Retraining Therapy.-
48.
Tinnitus Pharmacotherapy.-
49. Tinnitus Activities Treatment.- Part
7.
Additional approaches of tinnitus treatments.
50. Neural Therapy, Botulinum
Toxin.-
51. Neurofeedback.-
52. Non-invasive brain stimulation.-
53. Invasive
brain stimulation.
54. Bimodal stimulation for the treatment of tinnitus.-
55. Complementary and alternative therapies.-
56. Public and patient
involvement in tinnitus research.-
57. Mobile Health Solutions for Tinnitus.-
59. Tinnitus treatment: evidence and guidelines.- PART IX. Future
directions.-
60. The Future of tinnitus research: In Science we trust, in
Crazy we believe.
The editors come from different countries and different clinical and neuroscientific backgrounds, including ENT, Neurology, Neurosurgery, Psychiatry, Psychology, auditory Neuroscience, Neuroscience and have been working together in the tinnitus field for many years. All of them are active members of the Tinnitus Research Initiative and share the belief that a neuroscientific approach will lead to a better understanding of tinnitus and to better treatment options for the millions of people currently suffering from tinnitus.