Project Details
Repetitive Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (rTMS) for the treatment of chronic Tinnitus
Applicant
Professor Dr. Göran Hajak
Subject Area
Clinical Psychiatry, Psychotherapy, Child and Adolescent Psychiatry
Term
from 2007 to 2013
Project identifier
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Project number 33974584
Chronic tinnitus is a debilitating and life-altering experience affecting millions of people in western countries. Despite its enormous social and ecomic burden, up to now no well-established specific treatment for this disorder is available. While traditionally chronic tinnitus has been viewed as having a purely auditory etiology, growing evidence underscore abnormal functioning of the central nervous system including hyperactivity of the auditory cortex and maladaptive neuroplasticity in distinct cortical networks. Repetitive Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (rTMS) is a new biophysical treatment method which applied in a low-frequency range has shown to reduce brain hyperexcitability and to modulate neuroplasticity in critical cortical circuits. Based on these neurobiological qualities and used as a causally-orientated treatmant strategy, low-frequency rTMS was able to improve tinnitus complaints significantly beyond the stimulation period in several clinical trials. Simultaneously, beneficial therapeutical response was associated with selective changes in neurobiological mechanisms, pointing to alterations in neuroplasticity as crucial for the mediation of treatment effects. Aiming at a systematic investigation based on a large sample size, the proposed randomized controlled multicenter trial will study the efficacy of low frequency rTMS in the treatment of chronic tinnitus and will focus to elucidate neurobiological mechanisms underlying rTMS induced clinical effects.
DFG Programme
Clinical Trials
Participating Persons
Dr. Peter Eichhammer; Professor Dr. Berthold Langguth