10 Minute consultation: Tinnitus
An elderly widower complains of ringing in his
ears. He denies any associated symptoms. He
takes atenolol for hypertension. Tired and
anxious, he wants to know what is wrong.
What issues you should cover
Tinnitus—the sensation of noises in the ears or head not
attributable to any perceivable external sound—is
common. Is the tinnitus subjective? Uncommon objective
tinnitus can be heard by others. The temporomandibular
joint, eustachian tube, palate, and carotid artery can produce
usually innocent somatosounds.
Character of sound—Ringing, hissing, or buzzing suggest
inner ear or central pathology. Popping, clicking, or banging
suggest problems in the external or middle ear or
palatal problems. Pulsatile sounds may indicate anxiety or
acute inflammatory ear conditions but also vascular
causes, including tumours (glomus, carotid body), carotid
stenosis, arteriovenous malformations, intracranial
aneurysms, and high cardiac output states. “Voices” need
psychiatric referral.
Balance—Bilateral tinnitus is usually innocuous; unilateral
tinnitus may herald acoustic neuroma.
Change over time—Determine intensity and frequency of
the sound so that you can gauge the progression of the
tinnitus over long term follow up.
Intrusion—Not all patients suffer from their tinnitus.
Intrusion raises patients’ concern about serious intracranial
disease, reinforcing tinnitus. Sleep, mood, and concentration
deteriorate. Intrusion dictates whether and
how much treatment is needed.
Otological history—Tinnitus may result from almost any
ear problem, especially causes of deafness, such as
audiovestibular symptoms, exposure to noise, head injury,
and ear surgery.
Other history—Tinnitus may be associated with fever,
cardiovascular disease (hypertension, cardiac failure), high
cardiac output states (anaemia, thyrotoxicosis, pregnancy),
neurological disease (multiple sclerosis, neuropathy, alcoholism),
and physical immobility. It is often associated
with mental stress and depression, so obtain a psychosocial
history, including isolation, divorce, bereavement,
redundancy, and so on. Obtain a drug history: drugs
rarely cause or exacerbate tinnitus, but those that do
include salicylates, aminoglycosides, quinine, loop diuretics,
and ß blockers.
What you should do
- Examine his ears for meatal wax or foreign bodies and
signs of middle ear disease (effusion, infection, perforation,
glomus). Free-field speech tests detect deafness,
and the Rinne test and Weber’s test differentiate
conductive and sensorineural losses. Audiometry is
better for defining and documenting deafness, as
most patients have measurable loss (presbycusis, noise
induced deafness, otosclerosis, Meniere’s disease).
- Examine his cranial nerves, especially trigeminal and
facial. A history will indicate further neurological or
general examinations.
- Although they are rarely cost effective, consider laboratory
tests—blood count, blood glucose, and thyroid
function—to investigate any general causes.
- Consider a specialist referral for imaging. In persistent
unilateral tinnitus magnetic resonance imaging can
exclude retrocochlear pathology. In cases of pulsatile
tinnitus ultrasonography, computed tomography,
magnetic resonance scanning, or even angiography
can exclude vascular causes.
- Few patients show identifiable or remediable causes,
so aim to reduce effects.
- Sedatives or antidepressants help secondary agitation
or depression but do not eliminate tinnitus. Other
treatments (antiepileptics, vasodilators, anaesthetics,
hypnosis, acupuncture, and herbal remedies) remain
unproved. Surgery is limited to a few remediable otological
causes.
- Give explanations and reassurance with a positive
emphasis. Most patients are comforted by general
information (see leaflet on bmj.com) and come to
accept tinnitus as a fact of their lives.
- Offer self help advice: he should minimise mental
stress, avoid immobility by regular exercise, try relaxation
techniques, allow background noise (an open
window, a fan, radio hiss) to eliminate silence, check
his diet and lifestyle habits (alcohol, caffeine, and salt
consumption; smoking), and join a local support
group.
- If necessary (see box) refer him for tinnitus retraining
therapy, consisting of directive counselling (explaining
the problem, countering negative beliefs, and ameliorating
reactions) and sound therapy (hearing aids or
white noise maskers, or both, to raise the background
“sound floor”).
Reasons for referral to specialists
- Associated deafness or an abnormal ear condition
- Pulsatile tinnitus, unless associated with an acute inflammatory ear condition
- Persistent (>3 months) unitlateral tinnitus
- Persisitent intrusive tinnitus
Useful reading
- Wareing MJ. Clinical review: tinnitus. GP Magazine 2 Feb 2004:41-2
- Lockwood AH, Salvi RJ, Burkard RF. Current concepts: tinnitus. N Engl J Mrd 2002;.347-904-10
S Alam Hannan, specialist registrar,
Michael J Wareing, consultant otologist, Department of Otolaryngology: Head and Neck Surgery, St Bartholomew’s and the Royal London Hospitals, London
Email: mw@otology.co.uk
Farhhan Sami, GP principal, The Moorings Practice, Kenley, Surrey
studentBMJ 2005;13:133-176 April ISSN 0966-6494