About the Book

Tinnitus: Clinical and Research Perspectives

Tinnitus: Clinical and Research Perspectives summarizes contemporary findings from basic and clinical research regarding tinnitus mechanisms, effects, and interventions. The text features a collection of international authors, active researchers, and clinicians who provide an expansive scope of material that ensures relevance for patients and professionals. Reviews and reports of contemporary research findings underscore the text’s value for classroom use in audiology and otolaryngology programs. Patients and students of audiology will benefit from the text’s coverage of tinnitus mechanisms, emerging practice considerations, and expectations for outcomes–for example, recent successes of cognitive behavioral therapy, neuromodulation, and hearing aid use. These and other topics, such as the effects of noise and drugs on tinnitus, are reported in a way that enhances clinicians’ ability to weave such strategies into their own work. The influence of tinnitus on all aspects of life is explored, from art to medicine and communication to isolation, thereby providing clinicians and patients a deeper understanding of and greater facility managing a tinnitus experience. Finally, this text includes case studies that provide a practical view of tinnitus effects and management approaches. The editors hope that the consideration of mechanisms, interventions, and outcomes resonates with patients, clinicians, and students of audiology.

Chapters such as Tinnitus in Literature, Film, and Music make clear the ubiquity of the tinnitus experience and reinforce for patients that while tinnitus may be isolating, it is a shared experience. Other chapters, such as Musical Hallucination, and Acoustic Shock, address problems experienced by patients who experience not only tinnitus, but unusual auditory system behaviors that may be confused with tinnitus, or that can exacerbate a patient’s emotional response to tinnitus. Chapters covering conditions that complicate tinnitus management provide clinical findings that support intervention strategies. Subtypes of tinnitus that require medical attention are reviewed in order to clarify sources of the sounds, as well as the appropriate referrals that should follow the identification of such sensations.

About The Authors

Tinnitus: Clinical and Research Perspectives

David M. Baguley, BSc, MSc, MBA, PhD, is Professor of Hearing Sciences at the University of Nottingham NIHR Biomedical Research Centre. He was formerly head of audiology and hearing implants at Cambridge University Hospitals, United Kingdom. He completed undergraduate and master’s degrees at the University of Manchester and a doctorate at the University of Cambridge (2006). Dr. Baguley has more than 150 peer-reviewed publications; is coauthor on the books ”Tinnitus: A Multidisciplinary Approach, Second Edition” (Wiley-Blackwell, 2013) and ”Hyperacusis: Mechanisms, Diagnosis, and Therapies” (Plural Publishing, 2007); and coedited the latest edition of Ballantyne’s Deafness (Wiley-Blackwell, 2009). In 2010, Dr. Baguley coauthored a popular self-help book on tinnitus and hyperacusis, ”Living with Tinnitus and Hyperacusis” (McKenna, Baguley, & McFerran; Sheldon Press). In 2006, Dr. Baguley received an International Award in Hearing from the American Academy of Audiology and has been awarded three times with the Shapiro Prize from the British Tinnitus Association for tinnitus research (2005, 2008, 2017). He has been a visiting professor at Anglia Ruskin University; a fellow at Wolfson College, University of Cambridge; and is currently president of the British Tinnitus Association. Dr. Baguley’s clinical and research interests focus upon tinnitus and hyperacusis, with the aim of understanding these symptoms, and designing and evaluating novel and innovative and effective interventions.

Marc Fagelson, PhD, is Professor of Audiology at East Tennessee State University. He also serves as a consultant and clinical supervisor at the James H. Quillen Mountain Home Veteran’s Medical Center in Johnson City, Tennessee, where he serves a clinical population of more than 1,000 patients. He completed undergraduate and master’s degrees at Columbia University in New York City and his PhD at the University of Texas-Austin in 1995. Dr. Fagelson has more than 40 peer-reviewed publications and book chapters and has provided more than 100 conference presentations and workshops throughout the United States and internationally. Dr. Fagelson’s clinical and research efforts overlap thoroughly. His efforts focus primarily on individuals who suffer from the effects of bothersome tinnitus and disorders of sound tolerance that are exacerbated by histories of traumatic exposures and co-occurring mental health injury, such as posttraumatic stress disorder.

Table Of Contents

Tinnitus: Clinical and Research Perspectives

Chapter 1. Tinnitus and Hyperacusis in Literature, Film, and Music
David M. Baguley

Chapter 2. The Mechanism and Time Course of Tinnitus Associated With Hearing Impairment
Larry E. Roberts

Chapter 3. Animal Models of Tinnitus and Hyperacusis
Thomas J. Brozoski and Carol A. Bauer

Chapter 4. Psychological Mechanisms and Tinnitus
Gerhard Andersson, Hugo Hesser, and Laurence McKenna

Chapter 5. Tinnitus in Military and Veteran Populations
Marc Fagelson

Chapter 6. Drug-Induced Tinnitus
Kelly Radziwon, Sarah H. Hayes, Adam M. Sheppard, Dalian Ding, and Richard Salvi

Chapter 7. Clinical Aspects of Somatic Modulation of Tinnitus
Tanit Ganz Sanchez

Chapter 8. Influences of Amplified Music
Marc Fagelson and David M. Baguley

Chapter 9. Middle Ear Myoclonus and Tonic Tensor Tympani Syndrome
Myriam Westcott

Chapter 10. Pulsatile Tinnitus
Tobias Kleinjung

Chapter 11. Acoustic Shock
Don McFerran

Chapter 12. Hearing Aids for Tinnitus
Grant D. Searchfield

Chapter 13. Cochlear Implants and Tinnitus
Francka J.J. Kloostra, Rosemarie Arnold, and Pim van Dijk

Chapter 14. Self-Help Interventions for Tinnitus
Magdalena Sereda and Derek J. Hoare

Chapter 15. Misophonia and Phonophobia
Don McFerran

Chapter 16. Musical Hallucinations
Thomas E. Cope, William Sedley, and Suhkbinder Kumar

Chapter 17. Managing Tinnitus in Childhood
Rosie Kentish

Chapter 18. Managing Tinnitus in Adults: Audiological Strategies
Graznya M. Bartnik

Chapter 19. Managing Tinnitus in Adults: Psychological Strategies
Rilana F.F. Cima

Chapter 20. Emerging Approaches to Treating Tinnitus
Derek J. Hoare and Magdalena Sereda

Chapter 21. Tinnitus in the Future
David M. Baguley and Marc Fagelson

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