Vascular-Metabolic Risk Factors and Psychological Stress in Patients with Chronic Tinnitus

Standard

Vascular-Metabolic Risk Factors and Psychological Stress in Patients with Chronic Tinnitus. / Boecking, Benjamin; Klasing, Sven; Walter, Michael; Brueggemann, Petra; Nyamaa, Amarjargal; Rose, Matthias; Mazurek, Birgit.

in: NUTRIENTS, Jahrgang 14, Nr. 11, 2256, 28.05.2022.

Publikationen: SCORING: Beitrag in Fachzeitschrift/ZeitungSCORING: ZeitschriftenaufsatzForschungBegutachtung

Harvard

Boecking, B, Klasing, S, Walter, M, Brueggemann, P, Nyamaa, A, Rose, M & Mazurek, B 2022, 'Vascular-Metabolic Risk Factors and Psychological Stress in Patients with Chronic Tinnitus', NUTRIENTS, Jg. 14, Nr. 11, 2256. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu14112256

APA

Boecking, B., Klasing, S., Walter, M., Brueggemann, P., Nyamaa, A., Rose, M., & Mazurek, B. (2022). Vascular-Metabolic Risk Factors and Psychological Stress in Patients with Chronic Tinnitus. NUTRIENTS, 14(11), [2256]. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu14112256

Vancouver

Boecking B, Klasing S, Walter M, Brueggemann P, Nyamaa A, Rose M et al. Vascular-Metabolic Risk Factors and Psychological Stress in Patients with Chronic Tinnitus. NUTRIENTS. 2022 Mai 28;14(11). 2256. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu14112256

Bibtex

@article{94767708ef7e469fbeb16d351a4e9e11,
title = "Vascular-Metabolic Risk Factors and Psychological Stress in Patients with Chronic Tinnitus",
abstract = "Little is known about molecular correlates of chronic tinnitus. We examined interrelationships between vascular−metabolic risk factors, perceived stress, and other routine blood values in patients with chronic tinnitus. Two-hundred patients (51% female) were screened for 49 blood parameters pertaining to vascular−metabolic risk, immune function, and redox processes. They further completed perceived stress- and tinnitus-related distress questionnaires. Following descriptive analyses, gender-specific sets of age- and tinnitus-severity-adjusted regression models investigated associations between perceived stress and blood parameters. Patients reported mildly elevated levels of perceived stress. Elevated levels of total cholesterol (65% and 61% of female and male patients, respectively), non-HDL-c (43/50%), LDL-c (56/59%), and lipoprotein_a (28/14%) were accompanied by high rates of overweight (99/100%) and smoking (28/31%). A low-level inflammatory state was accompanied by reduced reactive oxygen species (ROS)-neutralizing capacity (reduced co-enzyme Q10 and SOD1 levels). Most vascular risk factors were not correlated with perceived stress, except for fibrinogen ({\ss} = −0.34) as well as C-reactive protein ({\ss} = −0.31, p < 0.05) in men, and MCV ({\ss} = −0.26, p < 0.05) in women. Interrelations between blood parameters and stress levels need to be investigated within psychobehavioural frameworks across varying distress levels. Alongside psychological interventions, a low-level inflammatory state may be a route for pharmacological therapeutics.",
keywords = "Female, Humans, Male, Risk Factors, Stress, Psychological/psychology, Surveys and Questionnaires, Tinnitus/epidemiology",
author = "Benjamin Boecking and Sven Klasing and Michael Walter and Petra Brueggemann and Amarjargal Nyamaa and Matthias Rose and Birgit Mazurek",
year = "2022",
month = may,
day = "28",
doi = "10.3390/nu14112256",
language = "English",
volume = "14",
journal = "NUTRIENTS",
issn = "2072-6643",
publisher = "Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute (MDPI)",
number = "11",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Vascular-Metabolic Risk Factors and Psychological Stress in Patients with Chronic Tinnitus

AU - Boecking, Benjamin

AU - Klasing, Sven

AU - Walter, Michael

AU - Brueggemann, Petra

AU - Nyamaa, Amarjargal

AU - Rose, Matthias

AU - Mazurek, Birgit

PY - 2022/5/28

Y1 - 2022/5/28

N2 - Little is known about molecular correlates of chronic tinnitus. We examined interrelationships between vascular−metabolic risk factors, perceived stress, and other routine blood values in patients with chronic tinnitus. Two-hundred patients (51% female) were screened for 49 blood parameters pertaining to vascular−metabolic risk, immune function, and redox processes. They further completed perceived stress- and tinnitus-related distress questionnaires. Following descriptive analyses, gender-specific sets of age- and tinnitus-severity-adjusted regression models investigated associations between perceived stress and blood parameters. Patients reported mildly elevated levels of perceived stress. Elevated levels of total cholesterol (65% and 61% of female and male patients, respectively), non-HDL-c (43/50%), LDL-c (56/59%), and lipoprotein_a (28/14%) were accompanied by high rates of overweight (99/100%) and smoking (28/31%). A low-level inflammatory state was accompanied by reduced reactive oxygen species (ROS)-neutralizing capacity (reduced co-enzyme Q10 and SOD1 levels). Most vascular risk factors were not correlated with perceived stress, except for fibrinogen (ß = −0.34) as well as C-reactive protein (ß = −0.31, p < 0.05) in men, and MCV (ß = −0.26, p < 0.05) in women. Interrelations between blood parameters and stress levels need to be investigated within psychobehavioural frameworks across varying distress levels. Alongside psychological interventions, a low-level inflammatory state may be a route for pharmacological therapeutics.

AB - Little is known about molecular correlates of chronic tinnitus. We examined interrelationships between vascular−metabolic risk factors, perceived stress, and other routine blood values in patients with chronic tinnitus. Two-hundred patients (51% female) were screened for 49 blood parameters pertaining to vascular−metabolic risk, immune function, and redox processes. They further completed perceived stress- and tinnitus-related distress questionnaires. Following descriptive analyses, gender-specific sets of age- and tinnitus-severity-adjusted regression models investigated associations between perceived stress and blood parameters. Patients reported mildly elevated levels of perceived stress. Elevated levels of total cholesterol (65% and 61% of female and male patients, respectively), non-HDL-c (43/50%), LDL-c (56/59%), and lipoprotein_a (28/14%) were accompanied by high rates of overweight (99/100%) and smoking (28/31%). A low-level inflammatory state was accompanied by reduced reactive oxygen species (ROS)-neutralizing capacity (reduced co-enzyme Q10 and SOD1 levels). Most vascular risk factors were not correlated with perceived stress, except for fibrinogen (ß = −0.34) as well as C-reactive protein (ß = −0.31, p < 0.05) in men, and MCV (ß = −0.26, p < 0.05) in women. Interrelations between blood parameters and stress levels need to be investigated within psychobehavioural frameworks across varying distress levels. Alongside psychological interventions, a low-level inflammatory state may be a route for pharmacological therapeutics.

KW - Female

KW - Humans

KW - Male

KW - Risk Factors

KW - Stress, Psychological/psychology

KW - Surveys and Questionnaires

KW - Tinnitus/epidemiology

U2 - 10.3390/nu14112256

DO - 10.3390/nu14112256

M3 - SCORING: Journal article

C2 - 35684056

VL - 14

JO - NUTRIENTS

JF - NUTRIENTS

SN - 2072-6643

IS - 11

M1 - 2256

ER -