Hearing Therapy Improves Tinnitus-Related Distress in Mildly Distressed Patients with Chronic Tinnitus and Mild-to-Moderate Hearing Loss

  • Benjamin Boecking
  • Leonie Rausch
  • Stamatina Psatha
  • Amarjargal Nyamaa
  • Juliane Dettling-Papargyris
  • Christine Funk
  • Petra Brueggemann
  • Matthias Rose
  • Birgit Mazurek

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The psychological effects of hearing aids and auditory training are underinvestigated.

OBJECTIVE: To assess the short- and long-term effects of an industry-developed auditory training on tinnitus-related distress, perceived stress, and psychological epiphenomena in patients with chronic tinnitus and mild-to-moderate hearing loss.

METHOD: One-hundred-seventy-seven gender-stratified patients were randomized to an immediate [IIG] or delayed [DIG] intervention group. Following binaural hearing aid fitting, participants completed a CD-enhanced 14-days self-study program. Applying a randomized-controlled cross-over design, psychological measures were obtained at four times: pre-treatment/wait [IIG: t1; DIG: wait], post-treatment/pre-treatment [IIG: t2; DIG: t1], follow-up/post-treatment [IIG: t3; DIG: t2], and follow-up [DIG: t3]. Between- and within-group analyses investigated treatment-related effects and their stability at a 70-day follow-up.

RESULTS: Overall, distress symptom severity was mild. Unlike the DIG, the IIG showed significant improvements in tinnitus-related distress. Some psychological epiphenomena, notably anxiety, slightly improved in both groups. Within-group analyses demonstrated the stability of the tinnitus-distress-related effects, alongside uncontrolled improvements of perceived stress and mood-related symptoms at follow-up.

CONCLUSIONS: The investigated hearing therapy lastingly improves tinnitus-related distress in mildly distressed patients with chronic tinnitus and mild-to-moderate hearing loss. Beneficial psychological knock-on effects deserve further investigation.

Bibliografische Daten

OriginalspracheEnglisch
ISSN2077-0383
DOIs
StatusVeröffentlicht - 22.03.2022
Extern publiziertJa
PubMed 35407372