Purpose: Tinnitus is the perception of a sound in the absence of external stimulus. Currently, the pathophysiology of tinnitus is not fully understood, but recent studies indicate that alterations in the brain involve non-auditory areas, including the prefrontal cortex. Here, we hypothesize that these brain alterations affect top-down cognitive control mechanisms that play a role in the regulation of sensations, emotions and attention resources. Methods: The efficiency of the executive control as well as simple reaction speed and processing speed were evaluated in tinnitus participants (TP) and matched control subjects (CS) in both the auditory and the visual modalities using a spatial Stroop paradigm. Results: TP were slower and less accurate than CS during both the auditory and the visual spatial Stroop tasks, while simple reaction speed and stimulus processing speed were affected in TP in the auditory modality only. Conclusions: Tinnitus is associated both with modality-specific deficits along the auditory processing system and an impairment of cognitive control mechanisms that are involved both in vision and audition (i.e. that are supra-modal). We postulate that this deficit in the top-down cognitive control is a key-factor in the development and maintenance of tinnitus and may also explain some of the cognitive difficulties reported by tinnitus sufferers.
Objective: Currently available patient reported outcomes questionnaires for dizzy patients give limited insight into the cognitive dysfunction patients often report. Using the newly developed English version of the neuropsychological vertigo inventory (NVI), we aimed to quantify the cognitive impairment of dizzy patients. Study Design: Prospective cohort study. Setting: Tertiary neurotology clinic. Patients: Adults with vestibular diagnoses seen between June 2018 and October 2018. Patients with neurologic disorders affecting cognition were excluded. Interventions: None. Main Outcome Measure: NVI score. Secondary measures: dizziness handicap inventory (DHI) score, cognitive failure questionnaire (CFQ) score, 20-item short form health survey scores (SF20). Results: Of 67 subjects, 13 had BPPV, 11 had Menière's disease (MD), and 20 had vestibular migraine (VM). VM patients were significantly younger (43.5 versus 61.1 yrs, p = 0.016), and had significantly higher NVI (67.5 versus 51.0, p = 0.040) scores than BPPV patients. MD patients had significantly higher CFQ scores (44.8 versus 23.4, p = 0.015) than BPPV patients. NVI scores were similar between MD (67.3) and VM (67.5) patients (p = 1.000). DHI scores were similar for all patients (p = 0.102). NVI scores were highly correlated to CFQ scores (r = 0.864, p < 0.001). Conclusions: VM patients have levels of cognitive dysfunction similar to MD patients, but greater than BPPV patients. A lack of difference in DHI scores among these patients reflects its limitation in assessing the cognitive domain.
Vertigo patients frequently complain of emotional and associated cognitive problems, yet currently, there is no satisfactory questionnaire to measure these associated problems. In the present paper, we propose a new internet-based Neuropsychological Vertigo Inventory (NVI; French) that evaluates attention, memory, emotion, space perception, time perception, vision, and motor abilities. The questionnaire was created using four steps: (1) open interviews with patients suffering from vertigo; (2) semi-structured interviews with an analysis grid to quantify and define the various cognitive and emotional problems reported by the patients; (3) a first version of an internet questionnaire tested on 108 vertigo participants; and (4) the selection of subscale items using principal component analyses (PCA). From the development phase, the revised NVI was composed of seven subscales, each with four items (28 items). In the validation phase, Cronbach's alphas were performed on the revised NVI for total and each subscale score, and to test extreme groups validity, the analyses of covariance (ANCOVAs) taking into account age were performed between 108 vertigo and 104 non-vertigo participants. The Cronbach's alphas showed good to satisfactory coefficients for the total and for all subscale scores, demonstrating acceptable reliability. The extreme groups validity analyses (ANCOVAs) were reliable for the total scale and for four subscales. Supplementary analyses showed no effect of hearing difficulties and an inverse age effect for attention and emotion subscales, with reduced problems with increased age in the vertigo participants. The NVI provides a useful new questionnaire to determine cognitive and emotional neuropsychological complaints that are associated with vertigo.
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