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Early Diagnosis of Steroid-Responsive & No-Responsive Hearing Loss

This study is currently recruiting patients.

Sponsored by: Department of Veterans Affairs
Information provided by: Department of Veterans Affairs

Purpose

Tinnitus is a prevalent issue for veterans who are proportionally more hearing-impaired than the civilian population. This study will be conducted as three concurrent projects designed to develop an efficient clinical technique to quantify tinnitus perception: (1)Laboratory development of the automated technique for comprehensive tinnitus quantification;(2)Development of a technique to test for tinnitus "malingering"; and (3)Evaluation of the automated technique in the clinical environment.

Condition Treatment or Intervention Phase
Hearing Loss
 Procedure: Tinnitus
Phase II

MedlinePlus related topics:  Hearing Disorders and Deafness

Study Type: Observational
Study Design: Screening, Longitudinal, Defined Population, Prospective Study

Further Study Details: 

Expected Total Enrollment:  50

Study start: August 2000;  Study completion: August 2003

Because of its close association with sensorineural hearing loss, tinnitus is a prevalent issue for veterans who are proportionally more hearing-impaired than the civilian population. The VA system disburses $110 million per year to over 115,000 veterans for their service-connected tinnitus disability, thus it is clearly a problem for veterans and for the VA. Unfortunately, most VAMCs do not have systematic clinical care available for their veterans suffering from tinnitus. The most obvious needs are to develop effective treatment methodologies for veterans, and to standardize a procedure for quantifying the disorder. Each of these concerns is a focus of this laboratory, and the present proposal addresses the latter need as a continuation study to develop reliable techniques to measure tinnitus.

The goal of this proposed study is a fully functional system, documented for response reliability and ready for clinical implementation at VA audiology clinics outside of Portland. To achieve that end goal, the study will be conducted as three concurrent projects: (1) Further laboratory development of the automated technique for comprehensive tinnitus quantification; (2) Development of a technique to test for tinnitus "malingering"; and (3) Evaluation of the automated technique in the clinical environment.

For Project 1, a series of experiments is proposed to reduce the time of testing, and to add new measurement capabilities. Each experiment will involve specification, design, and implementation of program modifications, human subject testing, analysis of results, and further modifications as indicated. Another series of experiments (Project 2) will be conducted to develop a tinnitus malingering exam. With such a test, veterans with true tinnitus would provide reliable responses, while those feigning tinnitus would have difficulty responding reliably. For Project 3, a duplicate measurement system will be installed at the Portland VA Regional Tinnitus Clinic. The automated technique will be used to quantify tinnitus in veteran patients during their tinnitus evaluation. Patients will be invited to return for repeat testing, which will provide reliability data for clinical responses. This project will promote clinical feedback that will be important for final development of the system as a clinical tool.

The three projects outlined above are designed to develop an efficient clinical technique to quantify tinnitus perception. Because the technique is computer automated, its implementation at VA clinics will involve a minimum of training and expenditure. The technique is further expected to impact the medical care of non-VA clinics, and could

Eligibility

Ages Eligible for Study:  18 Years and above,  Genders Eligible for Study:  Both

Criteria

Hearing impaired

Location and Contact Information

Steven Hefeneider, Ph.D.      (503) 220-3428    hefeneid@ohsu.edu

Oregon
      VAMC, Portland, Portland,  Oregon,  United States; Recruiting
Steven Hefeneider, Phd  503-220-3428 

Study chairs or principal investigators

John Fryer, Ph.D., Asst. Director,  Department of Veterans Affairs, Program Analysis and Review Section (PARS), Rehabilitation Research & Development Service   
Nancy Rocheleau, Program Analyst,  Department of Veterans Affairs, Program Analysis and Review Section (PARS), Rehabilitation Research & Development Service   

More Information

Study ID Numbers:  C2299
Record last reviewed:  January 2001
Record first received:  March 14, 2001
ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier:  NCT00013468
Health Authority: United States: Federal Government
ClinicalTrials.gov processed this record on 2004-11-09
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