Tinnitus Retraining Therapy (TRT) is an approach to managing problematic tinnitus. Many people have tinnitus, but only a very small percentage of those find that the sound affects their quality of life. This management approach is based on Dr. Pawel Jastreboff’s Neurophysiological Model of Tinnitus (Jastreboff, 2004). This model was initially proposed as a theory for why only a very small percentage of people that have tinnitus are bothered by it, while most people are not.
We know from research that those with problematic tinnitus and other sound sensitivities develop an abnormal neural connection between the auditory pathway from the ears to the brain and the limbic system, which is the seat of our emotions. The limbic system is our survival centre and gets us ready to fight a predator or flee from the situation. To prepare our body to jump into action, stress hormones are released into the bloodstream, causing changes in our body to prepare for a fight to keep us safe. It is the meaning or interpretation that we give the situation that determines whether the limbic system will become activated. For example, if you were walking down an alley at night, and a dog jumped out at you and began barking, you would likely feel scared, anxious, upset and possibly other emotions such as anger towards the owner who didn’t have their dog on a leash. Your heart might start pounding, you might be breathing more shallowly, and your pupils might dilate. Now imagine that the loud barking dog was wagging his tail, excited to see you. Your initial reaction may be one of surprise, but after seeing that the dog was friendly, you would likely become calm almost immediately. Now let’s think about this. The loud barking was identical in both scenarios. The volume and other characteristics of the barking in both examples were identical. Why was your reaction different in these two examples? The answer is that the meaning you gave to each situation was different. When you believed the loud barking to indicate that the first dog was dangerous and may cause you harm, your body immediately went into protective mode, preparing to fight the dog, run away from it, or freeze, hoping that the dog would lose interest in you and leave. On the other hand, when you interpreted the loud barking as a sign of excitement, you might feel excited or happy to have encountered a friendly dog on your evening stroll, one who is hoping that you’ll throw him a ball or stick. The important lesson in this example is that the sound of the barking itself is not what caused you to react differently to the potentially menacing dog and the friendly dog. Instead, it was the meaning you attributed to the barking that caused the distinctly different emotional reactions.
Tinnitus is just a sound, plain and simple. It is not going to do you harm. Most people that have tinnitus do not experience any disruption in their quality of life. If you talk about your tinnitus negatively out loud or in your thoughts and dwell on all the ways that you believe the tinnitus has negatively affected your life and your happiness, you are giving it power. Your brain will begin to believe that this sound is dangerous and needs to be monitored. When you give the tinnitus power in this way, your brain will react as if the sound is truly a threat to your life, and the continual activation of your fight or flight centre, forcing you to keep listening and waiting for the sound to cause you harm. Your brain has been trained to believe the sound means danger. TRT changes the way that the brain thinks about the tinnitus, which changes the negative impact it has on your emotions and on your life.
Reference:
Jastreboff, P.J. (2004). The Neurophysiological Model of Tinnitus. In Snow, J.B Tinnitus: Theory and Management (pp.96-107). BC Decker Inc.
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