Assessment and management of pulsatile tinnitus
Hyder, Yousef ; Irving, Richard ; Ramalingam, Satheesh ; Wakerley, Benjamin R
Hyder, Yousef
Irving, Richard
Ramalingam, Satheesh
Wakerley, Benjamin R
Abstract
Pulsatile tinnitus refers to the perception of intermittent, often rhythmical sounds, which are typically throbbing, beating or whooshing in nature, and may or may not be synchronised to the patient's pulse. It may also be classified as either objective, where the clinician can also hear the sound on auscultation, or subjective, where only the patient hears it, often due to heightened awareness of blood flow in the ear. It is important for neurologists to have an understanding of pulsatile tinnitus as, especially when combined with other symptoms and signs, it may suggest a specific neurological or neurovascular diagnosis.
MIDER Authors
Date
2025-12-24
Type
Article
Subject
Neurology
Collections
Citation
hevet B, Devauchelle-Pensec V, Pontarini E, Baloche V, Bombardieri M, Bowman SJ, Barnes M, Sreih AG, Liu J, Kelly S, Christodoulou A, Moingeon P, Laigle L, Soret P, Le Dantec C, Pers JO, Alarcon-Riquelme ME, Barturen G, Mariette X, van Roon J, Seror R, Nocturne G, Cornec D, Foulquier N; PRECISEADS Clinical Consortium, NECESSITY consortium. Transcriptomic stratification predicts response to rituximab, abatacept, or the association of hydroxychloroquine and leflunomide in 3 randomised controlled clinical trials of Sjögren's disease. Ann Rheum Dis. 2025 Dec 24:S0003-4967(25)04549-2. doi: 10.1016/j.ard.2025.11.017.
Journal / Source Title
Practical neurology
DOI
10.1136/pn-2025-004624
PMID
41444006
Publisher
Elsevier
