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Tinnitus: A warning symptom in non otological pathologies Amr El Refaie, MD Auckland 2014 What is Tinnitus? • A family of symptoms rather than a disease • Symptoms belong to a varying number of pathologies The sensation of sound/noise, not brought about by simultaneously applied mechanoacoustic or electrical signal Tinnitus management? •Tinnitus is a symptom waiting for a diagnosis (first) If I am attending a patient with tinnitus • What are the causes? Sinister pathology? • How does it work? Can I affect the generation mechanisms? • What are the effects? Can I improve the quality of life? Tinnitus and non otological conditions • The list is long !! • Somatosensory tinnitus and TMJ dysfunctions • Demyelination related tinnitus Example presentation title Page 5 The concept of cross modal interaction of multisensory neurones • The responsiveness of a single neuron to stimulation of different sensory modalities and/or the modulation of activity evoked by one modality on that evoked by another (Kayser & Logothetis, 2007) • Changes in the response rate of the neuron, being either suppressive or enhancing Example presentation title Page 6 Hypothesis • it has been suggested that proprioceptive inputs from intra oral structures could be used to cancel responses to auditory stimuli evoked by internally generated sounds as self vocalization and respiration (Bell et al., 1997; Shore, 2005) • The functioning of the DCN in detection and processing external auditory signals Example presentation title Page 7 Implications • “Referred” tinnitus from areas supplied by the trigiminal nerve (dental region) • Similar mechanisms working for the facial nerve, vagus nerve, great auricular nerve • Especially important in cases of unilateral acute tinnitus, intermittent tinnitus, pulsatile tinnitus (Somatosensory pulsatile tinnitus syndrome, Levine et al, 2008) Example presentation title Page 8 TMJ and tinnitus • Temporo-mandibular pain-dysfunction syndrome, Cranio-mandibular disorder, Costen’s syndrome • A syndrome of joint crepitus, joint locking, tinnitus, aural congestion/fullness, vertigo, hyper- or hypoacusis, blurred vision, hoarseness and orofacial dysaesthesia (Chan and Reade, 1994) Example presentation title Page 9 Signs • tenderness of the temporomandibular joint(s) on lateral and posterior palpation • Deviation and limitation of the mandible on jaw opening and on lateral excursions with or without joint noises • Tenderness associated with the palpation of the muscles of mastication including the masseter, medial pterygoid, and temporalis muscles Example presentation title Page 10 Prevalence of otological complaints in TMJ disorders • 60% of patients with chronic tinnitus has one or two TMJ symptoms, in relation to 36% of non tinnitus control group (Bernhardt et al, 2004) • Incidence of 7% in 900 patients series ( Upton et al, 2004) • 80% of patients had TMJ symptoms, 43% improved after treatment for TMJ(Tullberg and Ernberg, 2006) Example presentation title Page 11 Pathophysiology • Muscular spam/anatomical theory • Cross modulation/neurological theory Example presentation title Page 12 Muscular spasm/anatomical theory • Mandibular over closure with posterior dysplacement of the condyle, pressuring the Auriculotemporal and chroda tympani nerves, and the ET • Tympanic plate and glenoid fossa erosion (Costen 1956) Example presentation title Page 13 Functional/muscular recruitment • Spasm of the masseters, posterior ptyregoid muscles in particular transmitted to muscles and structures of the middle ear • Internal ptyregoid muscles connection to the tensor tympani muscles, tensor veli palatini muscles Example presentation title Page 14 Functional/muscular recruitment • Facial spasm and non acoustic stapedius muscle contraction • Masseter muscle spasm and contraction of the stapedius muscle (stapedius muscle lying within the pain reference zone of the messeteric trigger points) Travell and Simmons, 1983 Example presentation title Page 15 Alteration of acoustic transmission • Tremor or myoclonus of the tensor muscles in the middle ear (myorhythmia) caused by ‘autogenous vibrations’ in the sound conducting system. • This was thought to be the result of a fatigue reaction resulting from prolonged irritation and stress of the muscles innervated by the trigeminal nerve Example presentation title Page 16 Embryological attributes • The malleus, incus, anterior malleolar folds, and the tensor tympani and tensor veli palatini muscles are all derived from the first pharyngeal arch and hence are innervated by the trigeminal nerve • Same as the masticatory and tensor muscles of the jaw Example presentation title Page 17 Neurological correlates • Cross-modulation and referred signals • Synkenesis, masseter and tensor tympani cross innervation(mainly post traumatic) • Impacted third molar tooth, with subsequent infection and pressure • Sensory signal from the trigeminal nerve could be affected during tooth-grinding Example presentation title Page 18 Management of TMJ pain dysfunction syndrome • Counselling, biofeedback, thermotherapy • Acupuncture, cryotherapy, ultrasound therapy • Intra-articular injection, corticosteroids, analgesics, muscle relaxants • Surgery, prosthetic rehabilitation, interocclusal appliance therapy Example presentation title Page 19 Demyelination • Demyelination refers to a group of neurological conditions characterised by the loss of the myelin sheath insulation of the nerves • Multiple sclerosis (MS) is the most common pathological entity, other conditions include Guillian-Barre syndrome, Transverse myelitis, some manifestations of pernicious anaemia,… Multiple Sclerosis (MS) • Demyelination is the root cause of the symptoms that people with MS experience. When it occurs the speed at which messages pass along the nerves is slower than normal. Even when the patches of scarring caused by demyelination have healed and re-myelination has occurred, the response time of the nerve endings tends to remain slower. Aetiological theories • Immunologic: – Specific immune response directed against the CNS – Evidences are emerging about specific antigens and receptors sites, still some way to go – The destruction of the myelin sheath and nerve fibres lead to slowing down and disruption of neural transmission Aetiological theories • Environmental – Migration patterns and epidemiological studies have shown that people who migrate from a high risk geographical areas of contracting MS, to low risk areas before the age of 15, acquire the new risk criteria of their new home – Higher risk the farther you are from the equator? Sun exposure and vitamin D role? Aetiological theories • Infectious agent – Many viruses and bacteria, especially those with higher risk of exposure during childhood, are known to trigger an inflammatory reaction which might be the precursor for demylination – EB virus, measles, human herpes-6, Chalmydia penumonia have all been implicated but strong evidences are yet to be revealed Aetiological theories • Genetic: – Not strictly hereditary, but having a first class relative with MS increase the risk of developing the condition several times above the population average – Theories are developing about genetic predisposition to environmental factors, leading to a certain autoimmune response, possibly triggered by an inflammatory process, are developing Multiple Sclerosis (MS) • MS is a progressive disease of the nervous system, for which there is no cure, yet. • An estimated 2,500,000 people in the world have MS. • More women than men have MS, with a ratio of 2 men to 3 women affected. • MS is the most common diseases of the central nervous system in young adults. • Diagnosis of MS occur generally between 20-40 years of age, very rarely before 12 or after 55 Multiple Sclerosis (MS) • There are four types of MS: - Relapsing – remitting (RR): - - Primary – progressive (PP): - - About 50% of RR individuals will develop within 10 years Progressive – relapsing (PR): - - 10-20% from the beginning Secondary – progressive (SP): - - Most common type, 65-80% of patients at the beginning Steady decline in abilities accompanied by sporadic attacks Malignant (Fulminant, Marburg variant) - Very rare extremely rapid deterioration Common symptoms - Visual disturbances - Limb weakness, involuntary muscular spasms – Loss of sensations, altered sensations, anywhere – Speech impediments – Depressions, mania, paranoid state,.. Hearing loss, tinnitus and MS • Up to 3% of patients complain of hearing loss and tinnitus • More likely to occur during the first 4 years and can be the presenting symptom • Cases presenting with unilateral and bilateral sudden SNHL and tinnitus have been reported (Drulovic et al, 1993, Schweitzer et al, 1989) Example presentation title Page 32 Hearing loss, tinnitus and MS • Tinnitus can precede, follow or occur independent of HL • Pontine hearing loss with loss of ABR waves after wave III (Morgen and Kau, 1988) • Cortical hearing loss Example presentation title Page 33 Vertigo and dizziness • Vertigo and dizziness are common at some point in the natural history of the disease (up to 25% at some stage of the disease, John Booth, 1996) • Vertigo is the initial presentation symptom in 5% of cases (McAlpine et al,1972), can be accompanied by tinnitus • Blurring/loss of visual acuity and optic nerve neuritis are the presenting symptom in 20% of cases ENG/VNG manifestations • Derangement of saccadic and smooth pursuit eye movement • Spontaneous nystagmus (peripheral or central) • Positional nystagmus • Dissociated nystagmus • Direction-changing nystagmus • Derangement of optokinetic nystagmus (reversal?) • Vertical upbeat nystagmus Case study • 22 male presented to the clinic with: – Vertiginous attacks or rotatory vertigo – Mild loss of hearing in the right ear – No other symptoms – Right mild to moderate SNHL with excellent speech discrimination – Left beating spontaneous nystagmus, third degree, peripheral characteristics – Mild derangement of saccades but within tolerance – No significant delay in ABR Investigations • • • • • • • History Audiological evaluation Evoked potentials Electronystagmography/VNG Optic examination (Fundus examination) MRI Scan and radiological investigations Lumbar puncture Management • Improving the speed of recovery from attacks (corticosteroids) • Attempting to slow the progression of the disease (Disease Modifying Drugs, DMD) • Treating the physical manifestations of the condition • The role of interferon (beta 1-b) Alemtuzumab • A drug usually used in treatment of Leukaemia • It works by destroying the immune system of the patient, especially the B &T lymphocytes • It forces the immune system to produce new cells that might not attack the nervous system • Early encouraging results (Coles et al, Cambridge university, 2012) especially in relapsing remitting type (side effects too) Future directions in management • Surgery? • Stem cell therapy? • Improving signal transmission in injured cells? • Preventing demylenation/cell death? Research threads • Incidence of early presentation of otological symptoms in specific populations (stage of ethical application) • Audio-vestibular manifestations in MS patients. Different problems in different types/stages? • Effect for early intervention, longitudinal study The role of the Audiologist • Main theme is that Early diagnosis and intervention = improved chance of better quality of life for longer time (RR for longer periods, with longer remissions) • All clinicians must have the knowledge and ability to “suspect” • Increase the incidence of suspicion How do we suspect? • • • • • • Age Vertigo/Hearing? Associated symptoms? Change in acuity of vision Fatigue Neurological manifestations