All Relations between Tinnitus and inferior frontal gyrus

Publication Sentence Publish Date Extraction Date Species
Yihsin Tai, Somayeh Shahsavarani, Rafay A Khan, Sara A Schmidt, Fatima T Husai. An Inverse Relationship Between Gray Matter Volume and Speech-in-Noise Performance in Tinnitus Patients with Normal Hearing Sensitivity. Journal of the Association for Research in Otolaryngology : JARO. 2023-03-03. PMID:36869165. the results showed decreased gm volume in the right inferior frontal gyrus in the tinnitus group relative to the control group. 2023-03-03 2023-08-14 human
Han Lv, Chunli Liu, Zhaodi Wang, Pengfei Zhao, Xu Cheng, Zhenghan Yang, Shusheng Gong, Zhenchang Wan. Altered functional connectivity of the thalamus in tinnitus patients is correlated with symptom alleviation after sound therapy. Brain imaging and behavior. vol 14. issue 6. 2021-03-22. PMID:31900891. fc values between the thalamus, inferior frontal gyrus (ifg), and anterior cingulate cortex (acc) featured higher values in the tinnitus group at baseline compared to the healthy controls and restoration in tinnitus patients after treatment. 2021-03-22 2023-08-13 Not clear
Han Lv, Chunli Liu, Zhaodi Wang, Pengfei Zhao, Xu Cheng, Zhenghan Yang, Shusheng Gong, Zhenchang Wan. Altered functional connectivity of the thalamus in tinnitus patients is correlated with symptom alleviation after sound therapy. Brain imaging and behavior. vol 14. issue 6. 2021-03-22. PMID:31900891. decreased tinnitus handicap inventory (thi) scores and decreased fc values between the right thalamus and right ifg were positively correlated (r = 0.476, p = 0.016). 2021-03-22 2023-08-13 Not clear
Benedikt Hofmeier, Stephan Wolpert, Ebrahim Saad Aldamer, Moritz Walter, John Thiericke, Christoph Braun, Dennis Zelle, Lukas Rüttiger, Uwe Klose, Marlies Knippe. Reduced sound-evoked and resting-state BOLD fMRI connectivity in tinnitus. NeuroImage. Clinical. vol 20. 2019-01-18. PMID:30202725. the finding went hand-in-hand with the emotional (amygdala, anterior insula) and temporofrontal/stress-regulating regions (prefrontal cortex, inferior frontal gyrus) that were no longer positively connected with auditory cortex regions in the tinnitus group but were instead positively connected to lower-level auditory brainstem regions. 2019-01-18 2023-08-13 human
Yu-Chen Chen, Wenqing Xia, Bin Luo, Vijaya P K Muthaiah, Zhenyu Xiong, Jian Zhang, Jian Wang, Richard Salvi, Gao-Jun Ten. Frequency-specific alternations in the amplitude of low-frequency fluctuations in chronic tinnitus. Frontiers in neural circuits. vol 9. 2016-07-06. PMID:26578894. we observed significant differences between tinnitus patients and normal controls in alff/falff in the two bands (slow-4 and slow-5) in several brain regions including the superior frontal gyrus (sfg), inferior frontal gyrus, middle temporal gyrus, angular gyrus, supramarginal gyrus, and middle occipital gyrus. 2016-07-06 2023-08-13 human
Sven Vanneste, Dirk De Ridde. The auditory and non-auditory brain areas involved in tinnitus. An emergent property of multiple parallel overlapping subnetworks. Frontiers in systems neuroscience. vol 6. 2012-10-02. PMID:22586375. source localization of quantitative electroencephalography (qeeg) data demonstrate the involvement of auditory brain areas as well as several non-auditory brain areas such as the anterior cingulate cortex (dorsal and subgenual), auditory cortex (primary and secondary), dorsal lateral prefrontal cortex, insula, supplementary motor area, orbitofrontal cortex (including the inferior frontal gyrus), parahippocampus, posterior cingulate cortex and the precuneus, in different aspects of tinnitus. 2012-10-02 2023-08-12 Not clear