articleJournal of NeuroscienceSep 21, 2011BRONZE OA

Tinnitus with a Normal Audiogram: Physiological Evidence for Hidden Hearing Loss and Computational Model

University College London · UCL Australia

PubMed
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Abstract

Ever since Pliny the Elder coined the term tinnitus, the perception of sound in the absence of an external sound source has remained enigmatic. Traditional theories assume that tinnitus is triggered by cochlear damage, but many tinnitus patients present with a normal audiogram, i.e., with no direct signs of cochlear damage. Here, we report that in human subjects with tinnitus and a normal audiogram, auditory brainstem responses show a significantly reduced amplitude of the wave I potential (generated by primary auditory nerve fibers) but normal amplitudes of the more centrally generated wave V. This provides direct physiological evidence of "hidden hearing loss" that manifests as reduced neural output from the…

Citation impact

1,025
total citations
FWCI
13.59
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100%
References
39
Citations per year

Authors

2

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Audiogram
  • Tinnitus
  • Audiology
  • Hearing loss
  • Brainstem
  • Auditory pathways
  • Cochlea
  • Auditory brainstem response
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