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Neuro-Music Therapy for Recent Onset Tinnitus: Evaluation of a Therapy Concept

Not Applicable
Conditions
Tinnitus
Interventions
Behavioral: Neuro-Music Therapy immediately
Behavioral: Neuro-Music Therapy after waiting time
Behavioral: Music-therapeutical stress management coaching
Registration Number
NCT01566708
Lead Sponsor
German Center for Music Therapy Research
Brief Summary

To date, the pharmacological treatment options for tinnitus are unsatisfactory. For acute tinnitus drug treatments are only rated as being successful in approximately half of all cases. Therefore, the purpose of this study is to evaluate a neuro-music therapeutic approach (the "Heidelberg Model of Music Therapy") as a new treatment option for patients with recent onset tinnitus after initial medical treatment has failed.

Detailed Description

Acute tinnitus is the phenomenon of ringing or buzzing in the ears without an external sound source that is persisting for a maximum of three month. Several pharmacological treatment options for acute tinnitus have been established. Nonetheless, after initial medical intervention, tinnitus symptoms are often persisting and leading to substantial distress.

The objective of the present study is to examine the efficacy of the "Heidelberg Model of Music Therapy" for patients with recent onset tinnitus whose tinnitus symptoms are enduring after pharmacological treatment. The "Heidelberg Model of Music Therapy" is a manualized short term music therapeutic intervention lasting for 9 consecutive 50-minutes sessions of individualized therapy. It strives for an integration of strategies to manage the psychological state and possibly restore the underlying neurophysiological reorganisation. At the basis of this music therapy concept is the notion that tinnitus is experienced as an auditory percept - just as musical stimuli are experienced as auditory percepts. An outstanding feature of this treatment approach is the way in which patients actively influence their symptoms. This leads to an improved self-efficacy and a more differentiated picture of their symptomatology.

For patients with chronic subjective tinnitus the "Heidelberg Model of Music Therapy" has proven to be an efficient means to reduce tinnitus distress and loudness. Prior studies indicate that these positive results are due to the beneficial influence of the music therapy on the neuronal structures underlying tinnitus pathology.

In the present study the effects of the music therapeutic intervention on tinnitus severity and tinnitus distress for patients with acute tinnitus are evaluated on the basis of a battery of psychological tests as well as psycho-physiological measurements. A task-based functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) paradigm is used to investigate alterations in neuronal networks supposed to be involved in tinnitus perception and chronification.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
UNKNOWN
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
60
Inclusion Criteria
  • Clinical diagnosis of acute tinnitus persisting for a maximum of 3 month
  • Adults, aged 18 or over
  • No contraindication for MRI scan
  • Initial medical intervention is accomplished
  • Patients are able to understand, read and speak German fluently
  • Patients are able to give written informed consent
Exclusion Criteria
  • Clinical diagnosis of chronic tinnitus persisting for longer than 3 month
  • Tinnitus related to anatomic lesions of the ear, to retrocochlear lesions or to cochlear implantation
  • Clinical diagnosis of severe mental disorder
  • Clinical diagnosis of Menière's Disease
  • Severe hyperacusis
  • Severe hearing impairment
  • Any contraindication for MRI scan
  • Initial medical intervention is not accomplished
  • Patients are not able to understand, read and speak German fluently
  • Patients are not able to give written informed consent

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
treatment groupNeuro-Music Therapy immediately-
waiting list groupNeuro-Music Therapy after waiting time-
control groupMusic-therapeutical stress management coaching-
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Tinnitus Questionnaire (TQ, Goebel and Hiller 1998) total score change from baseline to end of treatmentbaseline to week 1 and 12
Tinnitus-Beeinträchtigungs-Fragebogen (TBF-12, Greimel et al. 2000) total score change from baseline to end of treatmentbaseline to week 1 and 12
Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
change in tinnitus frequencybaseline to day 1, 2, 3 and 4 of treatment
change in electro-physiological variables (skin temperature, skin conductance level, pulse frequency, respiration frequency)baseline to day 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5 of treatment
task-based fMRI: change in neuronal activity from baseline to end of treatmentbaseline to week 1
Attention and Performance Self Assessment Scale (APSA, Görtelmeyer et al. 2012) total score change from baseline to end of treatmentbaseline to week 1 and 12

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

German Center for Music Therapy Research

🇩🇪

Heidelberg, Baden-Württemberg, Germany

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