Background: Tinnitus, which is often associated with reduced quality of life, depression, and sleep disturbances, lacks a definitive treatment targeting its pathophysiological mechanism. Inflammatory markers like TNF-α have been linked to tinnitus, thereby underlining the necessity for innovative therapies. This case study investigates the potential benefits of a multi-approach rehabilitation intervention involving whole-body cryostimulation (WBC) for a 47-year-old male suffering from chronic neurophysiologic tinnitus, who had underwent various unsuccessful treatments from 2005. Methods: the patient underwent a personalized, multidisciplinary rehabilitation intervention covering diet, pharmacotherapy, physiotherapy and physical activity classes tailored to the patient's needs and capacities, repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS), and whole-body cryostimulation (WBC). Results: The adjunctive WBC intervention resulted in a significant progressive improvement in tinnitus severity (tinnitus handicap inventory Δ% = -46.3%, VAS tinnitus score Δ% = -40%). Additional positive outcomes were noted in sleep quality (PSQI Δ% = -41.67%), emotional wellbeing (BDI Δ% = -41.2%), and quality of life (SF-36, WHO-5 Δ% = +16.5). Conclusions: This study supports the existing literature suggesting the potential of WBC as an adjunct in a multi-approach intervention in ameliorating tinnitus severity and tinnitus-associated disorders. However, randomized controlled trials in larger populations, which specifically consider WBC's effects on tinnitus, are necessary to confirm these findings and to explore the mechanisms that underlie the observed improvements.

Whole-Body Cryostimulation as an Adjunctive Treatment for Neurophysiologic Tinnitus and Associated Disorders: Preliminary Evidence from a Case Study / P. Piterà, R. Cremascoli, A. Alito, L. Bianchi, F. Galli, F. Verme, J.M. Fontana, M. Bigoni, L. Priano, A. Mauro, P. Capodaglio. - In: JOURNAL OF CLINICAL MEDICINE. - ISSN 2077-0383. - 13:4(2024 Feb 08), pp. 993.1-993.9. [10.3390/jcm13040993]

Whole-Body Cryostimulation as an Adjunctive Treatment for Neurophysiologic Tinnitus and Associated Disorders: Preliminary Evidence from a Case Study

P. Piterà
Primo
;
P. Capodaglio
Ultimo
2024

Abstract

Background: Tinnitus, which is often associated with reduced quality of life, depression, and sleep disturbances, lacks a definitive treatment targeting its pathophysiological mechanism. Inflammatory markers like TNF-α have been linked to tinnitus, thereby underlining the necessity for innovative therapies. This case study investigates the potential benefits of a multi-approach rehabilitation intervention involving whole-body cryostimulation (WBC) for a 47-year-old male suffering from chronic neurophysiologic tinnitus, who had underwent various unsuccessful treatments from 2005. Methods: the patient underwent a personalized, multidisciplinary rehabilitation intervention covering diet, pharmacotherapy, physiotherapy and physical activity classes tailored to the patient's needs and capacities, repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS), and whole-body cryostimulation (WBC). Results: The adjunctive WBC intervention resulted in a significant progressive improvement in tinnitus severity (tinnitus handicap inventory Δ% = -46.3%, VAS tinnitus score Δ% = -40%). Additional positive outcomes were noted in sleep quality (PSQI Δ% = -41.67%), emotional wellbeing (BDI Δ% = -41.2%), and quality of life (SF-36, WHO-5 Δ% = +16.5). Conclusions: This study supports the existing literature suggesting the potential of WBC as an adjunct in a multi-approach intervention in ameliorating tinnitus severity and tinnitus-associated disorders. However, randomized controlled trials in larger populations, which specifically consider WBC's effects on tinnitus, are necessary to confirm these findings and to explore the mechanisms that underlie the observed improvements.
inflammation; neurophysiologic tinnitus and associated disorders; rehabilitation; whole-body cryostimulation;
Settore MEDS-19/B - Medicina fisica e riabilitativa
8-feb-2024
https://www.mdpi.com/2077-0383/13/4/993
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/1118811
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