International Journal of Medical Biochemistry, vol.5, no.1, pp.28-33, 2022 (Scopus)
Objectives: Although many theories about the etiology of tinnitus have been proposed, it has not been fully clarified. In this study, we investigated the role of ischemia in the etiology of tinnitus. Methods: A total of 90 participants, 50 tinnitus patients and 40 controls, were included in this study. Total thiol (TT), native thiol (NT), NT/TT ratio, disulfide, disulfide/TT ratio, disulfide/NT ratio, ischemia-modified albumin (IMA), and IMA/ albumin ratio (IMA/AlbR) values of tinnitus patient group and controls were compared and receiver operating characteristic (ROC) analyses conducted. Results: IMA (0.767±0.06) and IMA/AlbR (17.71±2.46) values were statistically significantly higher in the tinnitus group than in the control group (0.742±0.06 vs. 16.00±2.48 and p=0.040 vs. p=0.002, Independent Samples test). No statistically significant difference was observed between the groups for the other parameters. While albumin was presenting a perfect positive correlation with TT and NT, IMA showed rugged negative parallelism with NT and TT, similar to that of IMA/AlbR. According to ROC analysis, a cut-off value of 14.29 was found to be statistically significant for IMA/AlbR in distinguishing patients with tinnitus from the controls (sensitivity of 96%, specificity of 32.5%, AUC: 0.676, and p=0.002). Conclusion: In the present study, in the tinnitus group, higher values of IMA and IMA/AlbR, which are markers of is-chemic status, support the theory specifying that ischemia has an influential role in the etiology of tinnitus.