Abstract
Events linked to post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) influence psychological and physical health through the generation, exacerbation, and maintenance of symptoms such as anxiety, hyperarousal, and avoidance. Depending upon circumstance, traumatic events may also contribute to the onset of tinnitus, post-traumatic headache, and memory problems. PTSD should be considered a psychological injury, andwhile tinnitus is a symptom, its onset and sound quality may be connected in memory to the injury, thereby evincingthe capacity to exacerbate the trauma’s effects. The myriad attributes, psychological and mechanistic, shared by tinnitus and PTSD offer tinnitus investigators the opportunity to draw from the rich and long-practiced strategies implemented for trauma counseling. Mechanisms and interventions understood through the lens of traumatic exposures may inform the clinical management of tinnitus disorder, and future studies may assess the effect of PTSD intervention on co-occurring conditions. This brief summary considered literature from both the hearing and trauma disciplines, with the goal of reviewing mechanisms shared between tinnitus and PTSD, as well as clinical reports supporting mutual reinforcement of both their symptoms and the effects of therapeutic approaches.
Reference50 articles.
1. Baguley, D.M., McFerran, D., and Hall, D.T. (2013). The Lancet, Elsevier Health Sciences.
2. The mechanisms and time course of tinnitus associated with hearing impairment. In Baguley DM and Fagelson M. Tinnitus: Clinical and Research Perspectives, Ed.; Plural: San Diego, CA, USA, 2015.Kaltenbach, J. Neurophysiologic mechanisms of tinnitus;J. Am. Acad.Audiol.,2000
3. Neurophysiologic mechanisms of tinnitus;J. Am. Acad. Audiol.,2000
4. Tinnitus with a normal audiogram: Physiological evidence for hidden hearing loss and a computational model;J.Neurosci.,2011
5. Tyler, R. (2000). Tinnitus Handbook, Plural Publishing.
Cited by
3 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献