Phantom noises in the head
Around 15% of the population suffers from tinnitus. This sensation of hearing a buzzing, ringing, swishing or clicking noise in one or both of the ears although no other sound is emanating from the immediate environment has recently been studied by a team of researchers from the Cyclotron Research Centre of the University of Liège and the ENT department of the University Hospital of Liège. The study looks at the problem from the perspective of functional magnetic resonance imaging and has been published in PLoS ONE. Tinnitus is mostly accompanied by noises of 10 to thirty decibels. However, much more exceptionally, these noises can be equivalent to about 70 or 80 decibels – a normal conversation is at about 55 decibels. In those who do not feel handicapped by their tinnitus a phenomenon called habituation comes into play: the brain filters the parasitical information to the extent that the “phantom noises” are banished to the subconscious. As Professor Lefebvre points out, it is the same mechanism which prevents us from focusing our attention on the ticking of a clock or the rubbing of our clothes against the body. Subjective evaluationIn fact there are two types of tinnitus. Described as “objective”, the first are in the minority (perhaps 5% of cases). With the aid of his stethoscope, a doctor can hear them. They are generally the result of a vascular deformation (for example, a blowing noise can be heard around the carotid) and for this reason are of the pulsatile kind as they are synchronized with the beating of the heart, or call to mind the idea of swishing, (blood flow). “To get rid of this kind of tinnitus, the underlying problem must be dealt with- for example, by treating the shrinking of the carotid artery”, explains Philippe Lefèbvre. |
|
|||||||||||||||||||||
© 2007 ULi�ge
|
||