Personality traits associated with tinnitus: A systematic review and contributing genetic variants
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Bernardez-Robledano, Alberto; Parra Pérez, Alberto Manuel; Moleon, María del Carmen; Lopez-Escamez, Jose Antonio; Pérez-Carpena, PatriciaEditorial
Elsevier
Materia
Tinnitus Personality traits Neuroticism
Fecha
2025-11Referencia bibliográfica
Bernal-Robledano, A., Parra-Perez, A. M., Moleon, M. D. C., Lopez-Escámez, J. A., & Perez-Carpena, P. (2025). Personality traits associated with tinnitus: A systematic review and contributing genetic variants. Neuroscience and Biobehavioral Reviews, 178(106389), 106389. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neubiorev.2025.106389
Patrocinador
Instituto de Salud Carlos III (PI22/01838); Andalusian University, Research and Innovation Department (PREDOC2021/00343); Consejería de Salud y Consumo, Junta de Andalucía (RHE-0134-2024); University of Sydney (K7013_B3413); Universidad de Granada / CBUA (Open access)Resumen
Chronic tinnitus is multifaceted condition associated with auditory (hearing loss, hyperacusis), neurological
(headache) and psychological disorders (anxiety, depression). Personality traits may determine how tinnitus is
perceived, and common genetic variation contributes to shape personality. The goal of this systematic review is
to analyze evidence supporting a link between personality traits and tinnitus. Published articles about tinnitus
and personality related to the Big Five Traits were included. Based on 7 studies, this systematic review identified
the neuroticism trait as the main potential connection between personality and tinnitus suffering. The consistency of this relationship is evident across different Big Five personality tools, with similar outcomes observed
regardless of the instrument used, reinforcing the consistency of this association. In order to establish a genetics
association, a GWAS based search revealed common genetic variants in the GRM5, XKR6, GRM8, TCF4, and
SLC39A8 genes, with SLC39A8 identified as a shared missense variant rs13107325 (C/T, p.Ala391Thr) between
neuroticism and tinnitus. The role of these genes in important neural functions points to possible shared
mechanisms underlying both conditions.





