Transcranial magnetic stimulation and extradural electrodes implanted on secondary auditory cortex for tinnitus suppression

Author:

De Ridder Dirk123,Vanneste Sven123,Kovacs Silvia4,Sunaert Stefan4,Menovsky Tomas123,van de Heyning Paul125,Moller Aage6

Affiliation:

1. Brai2n,

2. Tinnitus Research Initiative,

3. Department of Neurosurgery, and

4. Department of Radiology, University Hospital Leuven, Belgium; and

5. Department of ENT, University Hospital Antwerp;

6. Callier Center for Communication Disorders, University of Texas at Dallas, Texas

Abstract

Object Tinnitus is a prevalent symptom, with clinical, pathophysiological, and treatment features analogous to pain. Noninvasive transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) and intracranial auditory cortex stimulation (ACS) via implanted electrodes into the primary or overlying the secondary auditory cortex have been developed to treat severe cases of intractable tinnitus. Methods A series of 43 patients who benefited transiently from 2 separate placebo-controlled TMS sessions underwent implantation of auditory cortex electrodes. Targeting was based on blood oxygen level–dependent activation evoked by tinnitus-matched sound, using functional MR imaging–guided neuronavigation. Results Thirty-seven percent of the patients responded to ACS with tonic stimulation. Of the 63% who were nonresponders, half benefited from burst stimulation. In total, 33% remained unaffected by the ACS. The average tinnitus reduction was 53% for the entire group. Burst stimulation was capable of suppressing tinnitus in more patients and was better than tonic stimulation, especially for noise-like tinnitus. For pure tone tinnitus, there were no differences between the 2 stimulation designs. The average pure tone tinnitus improvement was 71% versus 37% for noise-like tinnitus and 29% for a combination of both pure tone and noise-like tinnitus. Transcranial magnetic stimulation did not predict response to ACS, but in ACS responders, a correlation (r = 0.38) between the amount of TMS and ACS existed. A patient's sex, age, or tinnitus duration did not influence treatment outcome. Conclusions Intracranial ACS might become a valuable treatment option for severe intractable tinnitus. Better understanding of the pathophysiological mechanisms of tinnitus, predictive functional imaging tests, new stimulation designs, and other stimulation targets are needed to improve ACS results.

Publisher

Journal of Neurosurgery Publishing Group (JNSPG)

Subject

Genetics,Animal Science and Zoology

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