View clinical trials related to Tinnitus.
Filter by:Venous tinnitus (VT) is seriously affecting the quality of life of five million patients in China. Bony wall reconstruction is the main treatment method, but the postoperative recurrence rate exceeds 30%, and the specific mechanism is unclear. Based on our previous work, a scientific hypothesis was put forward: the key to the recurrence of V T is pathologic remodeling of the peri-sinus bony wall mediated by the venous sinus morphology, blood flow, and pressure after surgical reconstruction. As a continuation of the National Natural Science Foundation of China-Youth Project, this project intends to combine multimodal imaging technology, multiphysics coupled numerical model and machine learning method to analyze analyze the data after bone wall reconstruction in multiple dimensions: ① To explore the influence of peri-sinus bony wall morphology, venous sinus morphology, intra-sinus blood flow, intra-sinus pressure, and cerebral perfusion on the recurrence of VT using ultra-high resolution CT, vessel wall MR, 4D Flow MR and ASL MR imaging technology; ② To explore the influence of blood flow impact, sinus wall pressure and peri-sinus bone wall deformation on the recurrence of VT using multiphysics coupling numerical model with vessel, blood flow, bone and acoustic fields; ③ To determine the risk factors and their weights of VT recurrence using machine learning methods, and to establish a personalized surgical planning and prognostic evaluation models; Thus, to verify the hemodynamic and biomechanical mechanisms of VPT recurrence to achieve personalized and effectively treatment. This project may prevent and warn the recurrence of VPT after bony wall reconstruction.
Treatment of Temporomandibular Joint Disorder can help reduce subjective tinnitus levels. This treatment changes the electrical activity of the patient's chewing muscles. For this reason, the relationship between muscular change and tinnitus levels can be evaluated.
This randomized controlled pilot trial aims to explore the Efficacy and central mechanism of acupuncture for treating chronic subjective tinnitus using functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS).
Clinical trials can sometimes favor certain demographic groups. Additionally, there is limited research that delves into the factors that influence participation in clinical trials, both positive and negative. The goal is to identify the obstacles and challenges that prevent participation in tinnitus clinical studies, as well as the reasons for withdrawal or discontinuation. The insights gained from this study will ultimately benefit those with tinnitus who may be invited to participate in clinical research in the years to come.
The present project involves research on humans with the aim to characterize the reduction of chronic, continuous, non-pulsatile and debilitating tinnitus in humans by comparing neurofeedback (fMRI or EEG) to the current gold standard behavioral cognitive therapy.
The main objective of this clinical trial placebo controled is to evaluate the action of intraauricular topical lidocaine on tinnitus. The question to be answered is whether lidocaine is superior to placebo (distilled water) in reducing tinnitus intensity when applied topically within the external auditory canal. Tinnitus intensity will be measured using the visual analog scale and acuphenometry before and after lidocaine or placebo application.
The investigators will evaluate the effects of wearing auditory mirror earmuffs on tinnitus and on audiometry.The auditory mirror earmuffs is a device that re-routes auditory input from the left side of the head to the right ear, and vice verse, thereby flipping the auditory input. This procedure is called Auditory Mirror Therapy (AMT).
Tinnitus can be very distressing for some individuals who experience it. The most studied intervention that works well for tinnitus distress is cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT). There is enough evidence to claim that internet-delivered guided CBT for tinnitus is as effective as CBT delivered face-to-face. The goal of this randomized controlled trial is to test the effectiveness of an internet-delivered cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) for tinnitus and an internet-delivered mindfulness-based tinnitus stress reduction intervention by comparing them one against each other and a waiting list control group in the adult population experiencing tinnitus. The main questions this study aims to answer are: - Feasibility of delivering interventions for tinnitus distress over the internet. - Is any of the two interventions more effective in reducing tinnitus-related stress than the waiting list control? - Is the effectiveness of mindfulness intervention non-inferior to CBT intervention for tinnitus? - Is participant engagement and dropout different in mindfulness and CBT interventions? Participants will be randomly assigned to a CBT, Mindfulness, or control group and will be asked to engage with the materials prescribed to that group for eight weeks.
The main objective of this prospective, open-label, non-significant risk study is to assess the efficacy and safety of Mahana™ Tinnitus together with care as usual in approximately 250 adults with symptoms of tinnitus.
The goal of this randomized trial to assess the angiographic efficacy of venous stenting in dural arteriovenous fistulae (DAVF) via improvment on Cognard's Classification as compared to no intervention at 6 months Participants belonging to experimental group will be treated using venous stenting. DAVF will be assessed by angiography at 6 months follow-up. Participants belonging to control group will be followed accordingly to standard of care (no treatment). After 6 months, control group patients can be treated by any means accordinlgly to standard of care.