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1.
Laryngorhinootologie ; 103(6): 452-462, 2024 Jun.
Article in German | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38830358

ABSTRACT

Chronic tinnitus is a symptom of disturbed auditory perception. More than 90% of tinnitus patients suffer from hearing loss. Many people experience tinnitus and seek for treatment, but suffering and actual burden of tinnitus is individually very different, sometimes it disappears after a certain time even without treatment. This process is called habituation. The actual suffering from tinnitus depends on stress symptoms and other psychosomatic comorbidities like depression, anxiety and sleeping disorders.Up-to-date there is no therapy that can completely switch off tinnitus, mainly because the origin and expression of tinnitus are individual and very different. This educational publication summarizes and evaluates scientific therapeutic approaches for chronic tinnitus, based on the newly elaborated S3-Guideline "Chronic Tinnitus", under the lead management of the German Society of ENT, Head and Neck-Surgery, published in 2021. It focusses on recommendations for counselling, interventions against hearing loss and psychotherapy, mainly cognitive behavioural therapy.


Subject(s)
Tinnitus , Tinnitus/therapy , Tinnitus/diagnosis , Humans , Chronic Disease , Cognitive Behavioral Therapy , Germany , Practice Guidelines as Topic
2.
HNO ; 72(7): 526-535, 2024 Jul.
Article in German | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38683408

ABSTRACT

Chronic tinnitus is a common symptom of the auditory system. A causal therapy does not yet exist. The recommended treatment includes expert counseling, psychotherapeutic interventions, particularly cognitive behavioral therapy, and measures to improve hearing. The treatment modules are multimodal and can be combined individually. Depending on the severity of the different disease dimensions (tinnitus and comorbidities), a rehabilitative approach may be useful for maintaining health and occupational ability. In addition to a thorough and well-founded diagnosis and counseling, specific cognitive behavioral therapy and non-specific psychotherapeutic interventions (mindfulness/relaxation) on an individual or group basis, physiotherapy, and exercise, as well as auditory rehabilitation measures (hearing aids, auditory therapy) in the context of multimodal therapy approaches are necessary.


Subject(s)
Tinnitus , Tinnitus/rehabilitation , Tinnitus/psychology , Humans , Chronic Disease , Treatment Outcome , Combined Modality Therapy , Cognitive Behavioral Therapy/methods , Germany , Evidence-Based Medicine , Physical Therapy Modalities
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