by Elana Gotkine

For patients with Meniere disease, implementing noise reduction measures during noise-sensitive periods is associated with improved vertigo symptoms, reduced tinnitus handicap, and enhanced hearing function, according to a studypublishedin the January-February issue ofNoise & Health.

Hua Zhang, from The First Affiliated Hospital of Henan University of Chinese Medicine in Zhengzhou, and colleagues conducted a retrospective study involving 223 patients diagnosed with Meniere disease between May 2021 and June 2023 to examine the influence of noise reduction measures during noise-sensitive periods on vertigo symptoms and vestibular function. Patients were divided into a noise reduction measure group (NR; 108 participants) and a non-noise reduction measure group (NNR; 115 participants).

The researchers found that the NR group demonstrated significantly greater improvements than the NNR group at the three-month follow-up in theTinnitus Handicap Inventory, Dizziness Handicap Inventory, Visual Analog Scale, Pure Tone Audiometry thresholds, vestibular function parameters, Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale for anxiety and depression, and multiple 36-item Short Form Health Survey domains. The NR group also had a higher basic vertigo control rate than the NNR group.

"This work supports the incorporation of this noninvasive and practical measure as a valuable complement to standard therapeutic management for this condition," the authors write.

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More information Hua Zhang et al, The Impact of Noise Reduction Measures during Noise-Sensitive Periods on Vertigo Symptoms and Vestibular Function in Patients with Ménière's Disease, Noise and Health (2026). DOI: 10.4103/nah.nah_219_25