Medical Scientist Training Program, Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, Nashville, TN.
Department of Hearing and Speech Sciences, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, TN.
Am J Audiol. 2021 Jun 14;30(2):341-358. doi: 10.1044/2021_AJA-20-00209. Epub 2021 Apr 20.
Purpose Hyperacusis is a complex and poorly understood auditory disorder characterized by decreased tolerance to sound at levels that would not trouble most individuals. Recently, it has been suggested that individuals who experience otalgia in response to everyday sounds (termed ) may differ clinically from those whose primary symptom is the perception of everyday sounds as excessively loud (termed ). Despite this theoretical distinction, there have been no empirical studies directly comparing these two populations of hyperacusis patients. Method Using data from a multinational patient registry (the Coordination of Rare Diseases at Sanford Registry), we examined self-reported demographics, symptoms, comorbidity, and response to treatment in a sample of 243 adults with hyperacusis, 152 of whom were classified as having pain hyperacusis based on reported symptoms. Bayesian statistical tests were used to investigate both the presence and absence of group differences between patients with loudness and pain hyperacusis. Results Individuals with pain hyperacusis presented with a more severe clinical phenotype, reporting a higher frequency of temporary symptom exacerbations (i.e., "setbacks"), less perceived symptom improvement over time, more severe comorbid headache disorders, and reduced benefit from sound therapy. However, the two hypothesized hyperacusis subtypes exhibited more similarities than differences, with the majority of symptoms and comorbidities being equally prevalent across groups. Multiple comorbidities were commonly observed, including tinnitus, primary headache disorders, psychiatric disorders, and functional somatic syndromes. Intolerance of sensory stimuli in other modalities was also frequently reported. Conclusion Although this study provides little evidence that loudness and pain hyperacusis are pathophysiologically distinct conditions, our findings indicate that a pain-predominant phenotype may be a meaningful prognostic marker in patients with hyperacusis.
听觉过敏是一种复杂且尚未被充分理解的听觉障碍,其特征为对正常水平声音的容忍度降低,而大多数人不会受到这种声音的困扰。最近,有人提出,对日常声音产生耳痛(称为“痛觉性听觉过敏”)的个体可能与主要症状为感知日常声音过大(称为“响度性听觉过敏”)的个体在临床上有所不同。尽管存在这种理论上的区别,但目前还没有直接比较这两种听觉过敏患者群体的实证研究。
我们使用来自一个多国患者登记处(Sanford Registry 协调罕见疾病)的数据,对 243 名听觉过敏成年人的自我报告人口统计学、症状、合并症和治疗反应进行了研究,其中 152 名患者根据报告的症状被归类为具有痛觉性听觉过敏。我们使用贝叶斯统计检验来研究响度性和痛觉性听觉过敏患者之间是否存在以及不存在组间差异。
痛觉性听觉过敏患者的临床表现更为严重,报告的临时症状恶化(即“挫折”)频率更高,随着时间的推移感知到的症状改善程度较低,合并的头痛障碍更为严重,以及声音治疗的获益减少。然而,这两种假设的听觉过敏亚型表现出更多的相似之处而不是差异,大多数症状和合并症在两组中同样常见。常见的多种合并症包括耳鸣、原发性头痛障碍、精神障碍和功能性躯体综合征。对其他感觉刺激的不耐受也经常被报告。
尽管这项研究几乎没有提供证据表明响度性和痛觉性听觉过敏在病理生理学上是不同的疾病,但我们的研究结果表明,以疼痛为主的表型可能是听觉过敏患者的一个有意义的预后标志物。