Bart Vinck
Ghent University Hospital
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Featured researches published by Bart Vinck.
International Journal of Audiology | 2006
Ingeborg Dhooge; Catharina Dhooge; Sven Geukens; Bieke De Clerck; Eddy De Vel; Bart Vinck
In order to develop a sensitive audiometric protocol for identifying ototoxicity in children, a retrospective study of 16 children treated with cisplatin and/or carboplatin was performed. Audiometric testing was done by means of pure-tone threshold audiometry (PTA), high-frequency audiometry (HFA), and distortion product otoacoustic emissions (DPOAEs). Cisplatin caused a sensorineural high-frequency hearing loss in the study group compared to the controls (pu200a<u200a0.01). Sixty-six percent of the cisplatin patients had a grade 2 or 3 ototoxicity. However, ototoxicity was not found in the patients treated with carboplatin. An excellent correlation was found between DPOAE levels and results obtained by audiometry (ru200a=u200a0.82). Patients exposed to cisplatin are at significant risk for the development of drug-induced sensorineural hearing loss. Because of the several advantages of DPOAEs (noninvasive, objective, rapid, easy to use, sensitive) this method should be added in the audiological follow-up in infants and toddlers.
European Archives of Oto-rhino-laryngology | 2012
Els Ooms; Stijn Vanheule; Reitske Meganck; Bart Vinck; Jean-Baptiste Watelet; Ingeborg Dhooge
Tinnitus has been defined as a phantom auditory perception. Research indicates the necessity to make a distinction between the physical symptom and the subjective severity of the tinnitus symptom, since especially the latter seems to vary among patients. The relationship between tinnitus severity and psychological variables has been well established. Anxiety is considered to be an important variable for understanding the differences in the subjective tinnitus severity. Although many studies confirm the relationship between anxiety and tinnitus severity, most studies do not take the possibility of shared method variance and content overlap between questionnaires into account. Furthermore, anxiety is a broad concept and contains both a cognitive and somatic dimension. Research including both dimensions of anxiety in tinnitus population is rare. According to us two conditions must be fulfilled before theorization on the relation is useful: (1) the presence of clinically relevant cognitive and/or somatic anxiety, (2) evidence of a substantial or “real” relationship. In our sample, almost 60% reported more than average cognitive anxiety and 40.8% reported clinical relevant somatic anxiety. After controlling for content overlap between the questionnaires used, the relation between tinnitus severity and cognitive and somatic anxiety remains significant. Two hypothetical models concerning this relationship that deserve future research attention are described.
European Psychiatry | 2011
Els Ooms; Reitske Meganck; Stijn Vanheule; Bart Vinck; Jean-Baptiste Watelet; Ingeborg Dhooge
Introduction Research indicates that subjective tinnitus severity varies among tinnitus patients. One of the variables held responsible for these differences is depression. However the relationship between depression and tinnitus severity was never investigated more in depth. Objectives If depression is responsible for differences in subjective tinnitus severity two conditions need to be fulfilled. First, there should be evidence for the presence of moderate to severe depressive symptomatology in a substantial group, and second, there should be evidence for a substantial relationship between depressive symptoms and tinnitus severity which can not be explained due to method and content overlap. Aims In this study we investigated whether tinnitus severity is a depression related problem. Methods 136 consecutive help-seeking tinnitus patients were seen by a psychologist and an audiologist. All patients filled in the Beck Depression Inventory (BDI-II), the Tinnitus Handicap Inventory (THI), and underwent psychoacoustic measurement (pitch and loudness). Results Mean scores indicate the presence of no or minimal depressive symptoms. There was only a positive correlation (pxa0 Conclusions Tinnitus does not seem to be a depression-like problem. There is no substantial group of tinnitus patients with moderate to severe depressive symptoms. The relation between depressive symptoms and tinnitus severity seems to be an artefact due to content overlap between de THI and the somatic subscale of the BDI-II.
SpeakUP Symposium: Current trends in evidence-based clinical research | 2016
Laura Leyssens; Bart Vinck; Leen Maes
Najaarsbijeenkomst van de Vestibulaire Vereniging ; 229ste Wetenschappelijke vergadering van de Nederlandse Vereniging voor Keel-Neus-Oorheelkunde van het Hoofd-Halsgebied | 2016
Laura Leyssens; Bart Vinck; Leen Maes
ENT/SASLHA/SAAA Congress abstracts | 2016
Hannah Keppler; Ine Vermeersch; Bart Vinck; Sofie Degeest
European Federation of Audiology Societies, 11th Congress, Abstracts | 2013
Hannah Keppler; Dick Botteldooren; Bart Vinck; Annelies Bockstael
Tinnitus, 6th International TRI conference, Abstracts | 2012
Hannah Keppler; Bart Vinck; Sofie Degeest
Tinnitus, 6th International TRI conference, Abstracts | 2012
Sofie Degeest; Bart Vinck; Hannah Keppler
Proceeding sof the sixt meeting of the Britisch Society of Neuro-Otology | 2007
Leen Maes; Bart Vinck; Ingeborg Dhooge