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    Psychological, neural, endocrine and immune study of stress in tinnitus patients: any correlation between psychometric and bio-chemical reliefs?

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    OBJECTIVES: The present study was carried out in tinnitus patients in order to study the psychological distress and the biochemical measures of this stressful condition. Psychological features were compared to immune and neuroendocrine parameters in order to verify in these subjects the possible presence of psychological and somatic responses to stress. METHODS: We studied 85 tinnitus patients who underwent hematochemical immune tests: lymphocyte subpopulations (CD3; CD4; CD3+CD4; CD8; CD19; CD16NK; CD3+CD16+CD56; and CD4/CD8), cortisol, adrenocorticotropic hormone, beta-endorphin, prolactin, and urinary catecholamine. RESULTS: Clinically, significant scores were obtained for hysteria, depression, paranoia, hypochondrias, and social introversion; and high scores were obtained for anxiety, depression, care for health, difficulty of treatment, low self-esteem, family and work difficulties, and social discomfort. There was a low to medium level of self-perception of stress. The less a subject felt stressed, the higher was his or her satisfaction level in the areas of psychological and physical functioning. The scores on the tests and the biochemical measures did not show a significant correlation, but there was a tendency to correlation for the lymphocytes CD19 and CD16NK and for adrenocorticotropic hormone. CONCLUSIONS: The comparison between the psychometric and biochemical variables did not reveal any significant correlation among stress perception, daily satisfaction, and the biochemical parameters of stress
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