Disentangling Tinnitus Distress and Tinnitus Presence by Means of EEG Power Analysis

Joint Authors

Meyer, Martin
Luethi, Matthias S.
Neff, Patrick
Langer, Nicolas
Büchi, Stefan

Source

Neural Plasticity

Issue

Vol. 2014, Issue 2014 (31 Dec. 2014), pp.1-13, 13 p.

Publisher

Hindawi Publishing Corporation

Publication Date

2014-09-03

Country of Publication

Egypt

No. of Pages

13

Main Subjects

Biology
Medicine

Abstract EN

The present study investigated 24 individuals suffering from chronic tinnitus (TI) and 24 nonaffected controls (CO).

We recorded resting-state EEG and collected psychometric data to obtain information about how chronic tinnitus experience affects the cognitive and emotional state of TI.

The study was meant to disentangle TI with high distress from those who suffer less from persistent tinnitus based on both neurophysiological and behavioral data.

A principal component analysis of psychometric data uncovers two distinct independent dimensions characterizing the individual tinnitus experience.

These independent states are distress and presence, the latter is described as the perceived intensity of sound experience that increases with tinnitus duration devoid of any considerable emotional burden.

Neuroplastic changes correlate with the two independent components.

TI with high distress display increased EEG activity in the oscillatory range around 25 Hz (upper β-band) that agglomerates over frontal recording sites.

TI with high presence show enhanced EEG signal strength in the δ-, α-, and lower γ-bands (30–40 Hz) over bilateral temporal and left perisylvian electrodes.

Based on these differential patterns we suggest that the two dimensions, namely, distress and presence, should be considered as independent dimensions of chronic subjective tinnitus.

American Psychological Association (APA)

Meyer, Martin& Luethi, Matthias S. & Neff, Patrick& Langer, Nicolas& Büchi, Stefan. 2014. Disentangling Tinnitus Distress and Tinnitus Presence by Means of EEG Power Analysis. Neural Plasticity،Vol. 2014, no. 2014, pp.1-13.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-1046697

Modern Language Association (MLA)

Meyer, Martin…[et al.]. Disentangling Tinnitus Distress and Tinnitus Presence by Means of EEG Power Analysis. Neural Plasticity No. 2014 (2014), pp.1-13.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-1046697

American Medical Association (AMA)

Meyer, Martin& Luethi, Matthias S. & Neff, Patrick& Langer, Nicolas& Büchi, Stefan. Disentangling Tinnitus Distress and Tinnitus Presence by Means of EEG Power Analysis. Neural Plasticity. 2014. Vol. 2014, no. 2014, pp.1-13.
https://search.emarefa.net/detail/BIM-1046697

Data Type

Journal Articles

Language

English

Notes

Includes bibliographical references

Record ID

BIM-1046697