AI Article Synopsis

  • Tinnitus currently has no known specific cause or FDA-approved treatments, leading to a strong need for personalized therapies for patients with idiopathic and refractory tinnitus.
  • The study evaluated various treatments, including transmeatal low-level laser therapy (LLLT) and its combinations with other modalities, assessing their effects on tinnitus handicap inventory (THI) scores over time.
  • Results indicated that both laser puncture and transmeatal LLLT showed significant positive outcomes compared to placebo, with longer irradiation times improving effectiveness; further research is encouraged to explore long-term effects and optimal treatment parameters.

Article Abstract

Background: tinnitus is a symptom with no specific cause known to date, and there are no associated pharmacogenomics of hearing disorders and no FDA-approved drugs for tinnitus treatment. The effectiveness of drug treatments is not reproducible on idiopathic patients and inexistent in refractory patients. Personalized treatments for these patients are a great clinical need. Our study investigated the outcome of potential alternative and complementary treatment modalities for idiopathic and refractory tinnitus patients.

Methods: we were the first to evaluate the tinnitus handicap inventory (THI) score changes over the course of treatment up to 15 days after complete cessation of treatment for novel transmeatal low-level laser therapy (LLLT) modalities using light alone, as well as LLLT combined with vacuum therapy (VT), ultrasound (US), Ginkgo biloba (GB) and flunarizine dihydrochloride (FD), while also comparing all treatment outcomes with laser puncture (LP), FD alone and GB alone.

Results: a positive treatment outcome (superior to a placebo effect) was achieved by using either LP or transmeatal LLLT, whereas short-term antagonistic effects of VT, US, GB and FD when combined with LLLT. For transmeatal LLLT, an improvement in the treatment outcome was observed by increasing the irradiation time from 6 min to 15 min (with 100-mW of applied laser power at 660 nm). Finally, a lasting therapeutic effect higher than the placebo was observed at 15 days after treatment upon combining LLLT with VT, GB or by using FD alone, by using the transmeatal LLLT alone or by using LP.

Conclusions: LP and Transmeatal LLLT can be promising alternative treatments for idiopathic and refractory tinnitus patients. Future studies should investigate the long-term effects of LLLT in tinnitus patients, as well as the dosimetry and wavelength of transmeatal LLLT.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10144000PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/jpm13040581DOI Listing

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  • The study evaluated various treatments, including transmeatal low-level laser therapy (LLLT) and its combinations with other modalities, assessing their effects on tinnitus handicap inventory (THI) scores over time.
  • Results indicated that both laser puncture and transmeatal LLLT showed significant positive outcomes compared to placebo, with longer irradiation times improving effectiveness; further research is encouraged to explore long-term effects and optimal treatment parameters.
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