Below are my remarks on the publications (I am interested in the bolded ones: 2,5,6,7,8,9,13,14). Since we have to chose just one study, I chose n°8.
1) In which parts of the body is this arterial stiffness measured? All over the body? Is the stiffness the same all over the body? We need the full article to know.
2) How did they measure the quality of sleep of patients before the occurrence of tinnitus? a questionnaire asked afterwards is not reliable. Ideally, polysomnography should have been done before and after the onset of tinnitus. "suggesting that the sleep quality of the past may have an impact on tinnitus occurrence" seems interesting but needs further investigation like "can sleep apnea cause tinnitus?", since some people awake with tinnitus (one more subtype of tinnitus).
3) It's about mice (animal model reliable?), and just salicylate induced tinnitus (a particular cause of tinnitus, which may cause a particular damage in the inner ear). The compound is given prior to the salicylate (in order to prevent, not to cure). The outcome is anxiety-behavior, not loudness. Though salicylate is the most used drug in the world, I have not found any member in this forum, who has "aspirin" as the cause of his/her tinnitus.
4) An umpteenth review of CBT versus no intervention or other therapies. The conclusion sentence "CBT may be effective in reducing the negative impact that tinnitus can have on quality of life" is contrary to the results and even is contrary to another conclusion sentence "Overall, there is limited evidence for CBT for tinnitus improving anxiety, health-related quality of life or negatively biased interpretations of tinnitus". It proves that CBT must be definitely abandoned.
5) It concerns this :
https://www.tinnitustalk.com/threads/take-part-in-the-comitid-study.21572/. So if I understood correctly, the next step is "to identify and evaluate suitable measurement instruments". So process still in progress...
6) This area of research can be interesting for those who appreciate to have a sound masking their tinnitus (or divert attention) and/or have a long residual inhibition timeset. Though so far, researchers admit it is a temporary relief (will there be one day a permanent therapeutic effect?)
7) Is fibromyalgia the cause of tinnitus? (74.3% of the patients), it is not specifically written. If it is the case, it would be interesting to know the mechanism of action of this disease on the inner ear/brain (one more subtype of tinnitus). Prevalence of fibromyalgia is 2 to 8% among the population.
8) This is exactly the kind of study that needs to be led. We use an imaging tool (in this case RS-fMRI) to screen a difference between a group of tinnitus sufferers and a control group, before and after a drug or acoustic intervention (in this case an acoustic intervention). However we need to read the full article since tinnitus loudness, THI... before and after treatment are not mentioned.
9) It is a case report for someone who needed a Auditory Brainstem Implant (so a rare subtype of hearing loss, much more than CI). I am impressed by this sentence: "Comparing the ABI OFF and ABI ON conditions, significant increase in regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) was observed in brain areas involved in the salience network showing already
suppression of tinnitus only by electrical stimulation in the absence of auditory stimuli". Does it mean that whatever the cause of tinnitus, an ABI can switch off tinnitus? It means a lot and needs further investigation.
10) It is a case report. So we can see that a part of the brain named auditory radiation has been injured, may be the cause of the onset of tinnitus. And so, can we treat this part of the brain? We need the full article.
11) This time, it is a Auditory Brainstem Response study about unilateral tinnitus (difference between tinnitus ears and non tinnitus ears) with no significant results. From what I know (
https://www.tinnitustalk.com/search/3875428/?q=auditory+brainstem+response&o=relevance&c[node]=4) ABR is not a relevant tool to measure tinnitus.
12) It is a protocol. Anyway, it is about Ginkgo Biloba: at the very least, this will be for tinnitus patients who have vascular issues. FYI, Systematic rewiew already done several times:
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3157487/
http://www.tinnitusjournal.com/arti...of-tinnitus-an-updated-literature-review.html
https://www.cochrane.org/CD003852/ENT_ginkgo-biloba-for-tinnitus
13) Like n°8, We use an imaging tool (in this case RS-fMRI) to screen a difference between a group of tinnitus sufferers and a control group, though both share the same issue (SSD). "These findings... suggest tinnitus biomarkers to monitor treatment response and to target specific brain areas for innovative neuromodulation therapies.". Though no treatment has been tested.
14) Like n°8 and 13. Relevant study. RS-fMRI seems to be a good tool to investigate tinnitus. Though no treatment has been tested.
15) Like n°3, it's about mice (animal model reliable?), and just salicylate induced tinnitus (a particular cause of tinnitus, which may cause a particular damage in the inner ear). However, they find a factor (VGLUT3) which may be responsible for tinnitus.
16) Well, nothing we don't already know. All this data, a priori collected by a tinnitus clinic, could be included in a large database (biobank).