Tinnitus is a serious medical and social problem of our time for many people, leading to significant psycho-emotional shock in some cases, disruption of social and professional adaptation. To date, there are several methods of treating tinnitus, the principle of which is based on pathogenetic concepts of brain neuroplasticity....
Clinicians should be aware that neuroplasticity-based compensation strategies for tinnitus are being systematically reviewed, but widespread practice changes should await individual strategy-level evidence synthesis from the full paper.
A neuroplasticity framework for tinnitus compensation could unify and advance therapeutic approaches, helping audiologists and clinicians select or develop more targeted interventions.
- 01Systematic review of tinnitus compensation strategies rooted in neuroplasticity (the brain's ability to rewire itself) theory.
- 02Highlights significant psycho-emotional and social burden of chronic tinnitus.
- 03Published in Vestn Otorinolaringol; PMID 42117419.
- 04Aims to translate neuroscience theory into practical therapeutic frameworks.
- 05Full scope of included studies and conclusions requires access to the complete paper.
Tinnitus has significant psycho-emotional and social impacts on affected individuals.
studysupportedNeuroplasticity-based strategies can compensate for tinnitus perception.
studypartially supported- PMID
- 42117419
- DOI
- 10.17116/otorino20269102172.
- Journal
- Vestnik Otorinolaringologii
- Publication type
- review
- Evidence level
- 1a
- Population
- Individuals with tinnitus (chronic ringing in the ears)
- Intervention
- Neuroplasticity-based tinnitus compensation strategies
Primary outcomes
Effectiveness of compensation strategies for tinnitus; Psycho-emotional and social impact of tinnitus