A broad consensus within the neuroscience of tinnitus holds that this audiologic condition is triggered by central deafferentation, mostly due to cochlear damage. The absence of audiometrically detectable hearing loss however poses a challenge to this rather generalizing assumption. The aim of this study was therefore to scrutinize cochlear functioning in a sample of tinnitus subjects audiometrically matched to a normal hearing control group. Two tests were applied: the Threshold Equalizing Noise (TEN) test and a pitch scaling task. To perform well on both tasks relatively normal functioning of inner hair cells is a requirement. In the TEN test the tinnitus group revealed a circumscribed increment of thresholds partially overlapping with th...
Background/PurposeIt is widely assumed that damage to the peripheral hearing system is an essential ...
Animal studies have discovered that noise, even at levels that produce no permanent threshold shift,...
Pure tone audiometry is a routine clinical examination used to identify hearing loss. A normal pure ...
A broad consensus within the neuroscience of tinnitus holds that this audiologic condition is trigge...
Substantial evidences show that tinnitus is associated with hearing loss. However, approximately 10%...
ObjectivesTo compare tinnitus patients who have normal hearing between 250 Hz and 8 kHz with normal ...
The occurrence of tinnitus can be linked to hearing loss in the majority of cases, but there is neve...
Background: The possible role of cochlear function in tinnitus generation is still a matter of debat...
Some tinnitus patients have normal hearing on the conventional audiogram. It has been suggested that...
It is widely assumed that damage to the peripheral hearing system is an essential prerequisite for t...
Tinnitus is strongly linked with the presence of damaged hearing. However, it is not known why tinni...
Tinnitus, commonly known as "ringing in the ears", is a perception of sound without physical sound s...
It has been suggested that the presence of a limited area of damaged outer hair cells (OHCs) with in...
Objective. The majority of tinnitus patients suffer from hearing loss. But a subgroup of tinnitus pa...
Ever since Pliny the Elder coined the term tinnitus, the perception of sound in the absence of an ex...
Background/PurposeIt is widely assumed that damage to the peripheral hearing system is an essential ...
Animal studies have discovered that noise, even at levels that produce no permanent threshold shift,...
Pure tone audiometry is a routine clinical examination used to identify hearing loss. A normal pure ...
A broad consensus within the neuroscience of tinnitus holds that this audiologic condition is trigge...
Substantial evidences show that tinnitus is associated with hearing loss. However, approximately 10%...
ObjectivesTo compare tinnitus patients who have normal hearing between 250 Hz and 8 kHz with normal ...
The occurrence of tinnitus can be linked to hearing loss in the majority of cases, but there is neve...
Background: The possible role of cochlear function in tinnitus generation is still a matter of debat...
Some tinnitus patients have normal hearing on the conventional audiogram. It has been suggested that...
It is widely assumed that damage to the peripheral hearing system is an essential prerequisite for t...
Tinnitus is strongly linked with the presence of damaged hearing. However, it is not known why tinni...
Tinnitus, commonly known as "ringing in the ears", is a perception of sound without physical sound s...
It has been suggested that the presence of a limited area of damaged outer hair cells (OHCs) with in...
Objective. The majority of tinnitus patients suffer from hearing loss. But a subgroup of tinnitus pa...
Ever since Pliny the Elder coined the term tinnitus, the perception of sound in the absence of an ex...
Background/PurposeIt is widely assumed that damage to the peripheral hearing system is an essential ...
Animal studies have discovered that noise, even at levels that produce no permanent threshold shift,...
Pure tone audiometry is a routine clinical examination used to identify hearing loss. A normal pure ...