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. 2002 Oct;27(5):338-43.
doi: 10.1046/j.1365-2273.2002.00591.x.

Gaze-evoked tinnitus following acoustic neuroma resection: a de-afferentation plasticity phenomenon?

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Gaze-evoked tinnitus following acoustic neuroma resection: a de-afferentation plasticity phenomenon?

N D W Biggs et al. Clin Otolaryngol Allied Sci. 2002 Oct.

Abstract

A review of the prevalence of gaze-evoked tinnitus in patients who have undergone acoustic neuroma resection was undertaken. The relationship of gaze-evoked tinnitus to tumour size, pre-existing tinnitus, side of the lesion or direction of eye gaze was also analysed. The design was a retrospective review of patients who underwent total unilateral translabyrinthine vestibular schwannoma resection by the senior author. Patients 1 year and 5 years following surgery were assessed. Results were obtained by either direct questioning in a clinical setting or via questionnaire. Data was collected on 36 subjects at an average of 14.6 months postoperatively (range 8-20 months) and on 32 subjects at an average 62 months postoperatively (range 56-68 months). Of the first group, 13 had evidence of gaze-evoked tinnitus (36%) compared with six (19%) of the second. The presence of preoperative tinnitus was a significant variable in univariate and multivariate analyses of the presence of postoperative tinnitus and postoperative gaze-evoked tinnitus. In a reduced model multivariate logistic regression using the two groups combined, the significant independent risk factors for gaze-evoked postoperative tinnitus were female sex (P = 0.046, odds ratio = 4.3), right side surgery (P = 0.02, odds ratio = 5.5) and pre-existing tinnitus (P = 0.008, odds ratio = 24.2). Gaze-evoked tinnitus is more common than previously reported in patients undergoing vestibular schwannoma resection. The underlying pathophysiology remains unclear but neural plasticity following unilateral de-afferentation remains a viable theory. The reduced prevalence over time suggests that this phenomenon may represent an active reinnervation process within the brain, which stabilizes with time. The significance of pre-existing tinnitus suggests that mechanisms of neural reorganization modify an existing physiological pathway. Further research is required into the longevity of this phenomenon, preferably with longitudinal studies.

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