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Internal Jugular Vein Compression Collar for Novel Symptomatic Treatment of Venous Pulsatile Tinnitus

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Pulsatile Tinnitus
Interventions
Device: Internal Jugular Vein Compression Collar
Registration Number
NCT05441540
Lead Sponsor
University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Brief Summary

This study seeks to pilot an evaluation of whether an external jugular vein compression collar approved by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for contact sports can provide symptomatic relief of venous pulsatile tinnitus. Furthermore, the study will evaluate quality of life impacts of the device and adherence by users.

Detailed Description

Background: Tinnitus is a medical condition with a wide variety of causes that is characterized by the perception of sound, often described as ringing or buzzing, without an external stimulus. Venous pulsatile tinnitus is a specific subtype of tinnitus with limited treatment options: some cases can be treated with surgical correction of an underlying vascular defect, others are entirely idiopathic. The clinical diagnostic hallmark of venous pulsatile tinnitus is relief of symptoms with light compression of the ipsilateral external jugular vein by the physician. Internal jugular vein compression collars, FDA approved devices currently used to prevent brain injuries in contact sports, function by this exact same method. Therefore, it is believed that these collars can treat pulsatile tinnitus.

Study Design:

This is a non-blinded, interventional, prospective single cohort pilot study that will recruit 20 patients diagnosed with pulsatile tinnitus at the UNC Meadowmont Ear Nose and Throat (ENT) clinic (see methods for inclusion/exclusion criteria). Volunteers will compare tinnitus intensity before and after administration of the collar, take the collar home and evaluate its symptomatic efficacy over a 2-4-week period, and return to clinic to complete data on quality of life and longitudinal impacts. This data will be analyzed for significance.

Expected Outcomes:

It is expected that collar administration will offer immediate symptomatic relief, illustrated as significant improvement on the tinnitus intensity scale during their initial clinic visit Symptomatic improvement will be sustained while wearing the collar, measured by sustained improvement in the tinnitus handicap inventory over the course of the study. Lastly, the collar will improve quality of life as measured by patient reported outcome scales administered pre and post participation.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
20
Inclusion Criteria

Not provided

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Exclusion Criteria

Not provided

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Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
SINGLE_GROUP
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Treatment GroupInternal Jugular Vein Compression CollarDevice will be fitted and worn up to two hours daily and participants will log changes in symptom intensity before and during device usage
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Change From Baseline in Pulsatile Tinnitus Symptom IntensityFrom immediately before collar placement to less than or equal to two hours of wearing the collar for each day of use.

Assessing the difference in pulsatile tinnitus symptom intensity without the collar vs. with the collar as evaluated by a 10 point Likert scale ranging 0-10 where 0 is no symptoms and 10 is maximal symptom intensity. Participants were allowed to use the collar for up to 30 days as often or as little as desired on a weekly basis but no longer than 2 hours continuously in accordance with the collar's FDA clearance. Participants completed a survey for each day of use reporting the intensity of their symptoms before wearing the collar and while wearing the collar. The difference between these symptom intensities with and without the collar is a single data point. Each data point was aggregated across all participants and across all days of use. From these aggregated data, the median and interquartile range were calculated. Therefore, the outcome is the median difference in intensity before and during wear of every day of collar use by every participant.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Temporality of Collar Usage Effect on Symptom IntensityFrom immediately before collar placement to less than or equal to two hours of wearing the collar for each day of use.

Participants were allowed to use the collar for up to 30 days as often or as little as desired on a weekly basis but no longer than 2 hours continuously in accordance with the collar's FDA clearance. Participants completed a survey containing a 0-10 point Likert scale of tinnitus intensity (where 0 is no symptoms and 10 is maximal symptom intensity) for each day of use reporting the intensity of their symptoms before wearing the collar and while wearing the collar. The difference between these symptom intensities with and without the collar is a single data point. These data points were grouped by week (week 1, week 2, week 3, week 4) across participants and the median for each reported. These medians were compared statistically to determine if the effect of the collar on symptom intensity changed by week.

Observed Clinical Effect of Collar vs. Home Use Effect of CollarFrom immediately before collar placement to less than or equal to two hours of wearing the collar for each day of use.

Assessing the difference in pulsatile tinnitus symptom intensity without the collar vs. with the collar as evaluated by a 10 point Likert scale ranging 0-10 where 0 is no symptoms and 10 is maximal symptom intensity. Participants were allowed to use the collar for up to 30 days as often or as little as desired on a weekly basis but no longer than 2 hours continuously in accordance with the collar's FDA clearance. Participants completed a survey for each day of use reporting the intensity of their symptoms before wearing the collar and while wearing the collar. The difference between these symptom intensities with and without the collar is a single data point. Each of these data points were grouped by location of measurement (in clinic vs. at-home) across participants, the medians of each of these two groups were reported, and then statistically compared to evaluate if the change in symptom intensity varied by location of measurement.

Change From Baseline in Tinnitus Quality of Life From Collar UsageBaseline, 5 weeks later upon completion of study participation

Determine if quality of life changes appreciably while using the collar and participating in the study as measured by the tinnitus handicap inventory (THI), a 25-item validated survey that evaluates the degree of impact a patient's tinnitus has on their quality of life. It is scored on a scale of 0-100, where 0 represents no handicap and 100 represent catastrophic handicap.

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

UNC Meadowmont ENT Clinic

🇺🇸

Chapel Hill, North Carolina, United States

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