Member LoginMember Login - User registration - Setup as front page - Add to favorites - Sitemap The headphones that could ease tinnitus with a radical new treatment !

The headphones that could ease tinnitus with a radical new treatment

Time:2024-05-08 10:46:59 source:Worldly Wisdom news portal

Headphones that swap sounds from one ear to the other could be a radical new treatment for tinnitus — the ringing noise in the ears that affects around five million people in the UK.

When a noise comes from the wearer's right-hand side, it is picked up by a microphone in the headphones and re-routed to the left ear. The opposite happens with sounds emanating from the left.

Scientists think jumbling the direction of sound, with the eyes telling the brain it's coming from one place but the ears telling it the opposite, helps to 'rewire' the auditory nerve (which connects the ear to the brain). And this 'turns down' the tinnitus.

The idea for headphones treatment came from mirror therapy, which is used for phantom limb pain (Stock Image)

The idea for headphones treatment came from mirror therapy, which is used for phantom limb pain (Stock Image)

Results published in the Journal of the American Academy of Audiology in 2022 showed 18 volunteers experienced significant improvements in their symptoms (stock photo)

Results published in the Journal of the American Academy of Audiology in 2022 showed 18 volunteers experienced significant improvements in their symptoms (stock photo) 

The results of a small trial suggest that using the headsets for two hours a day for three weeks significantly reduces tinnitus. Many people suffer temporary tinnitus, but for around one in 100, the ringing is long term and is often combined with hearing loss.

READ MORE: Have scientists cracked cancer mystery in young people? Experts think they've pinpointed bodily changes that are driving skyrocketing cancer rates in under 50s
Advertisement

When the ears are exposed to loud noise or infections, tiny hair cells that transmit sounds to the brain become stressed and emit excess quantities of a chemical called glutamate. This 'glutamate storm' over-stimulates — and eventually kills — nerve cells in the inner ear, which send sound impulses to the auditory cortex, the part of the brain that processes noise.

T his leaves cells in the auditory cortex switched on so they constantly relay sound to the brain, causing people to 'hear' ringing, for instance. In some, the cells remain in this 'switched on' state.

By this point, it is more difficult to treat. There are no drugs for it, and treatments include talking therapy, which helps patients live with the condition, or sound therapy, where background noise is used to distract them.

The idea for headphones treatment came from mirror therapy, which is used for phantom limb pain — where amputees still feel pain from the removed limb. By 'hiding' their affected limb behind a mirror which reflects the healthy limb, and focusing on this reflection, the brain is 'tricked' into thinking both limbs are intact. Studies suggest this leads to rewiring in the brain that reduces the perception of pain.

Scientists at Spaulding Rehabilitation Hospital in Massachusetts in the U.S., who developed the prototype headphones, think they work in a similar way, 'rewiring' connections between nerve cells so they no longer register tinnitus as a real external sound.

Results published in the Journal of the American Academy of Audiology in 2022 showed 18 volunteers experienced significant improvements in their symptoms. Now a trial is under way with 50 patients who will wear the headphones for three hours a day for three weeks, or a regular pair that play noise into the ear closest to the noise source. The results are expected later this year.

Commenting on the treatment, Dr Will Sedley, a lecturer in neurology at Newcastle University, said: 'It's a neat idea, but we need the results of the trial before we can say it works. In the meantime, the one thing we know does work well for many people is talking therapy.'

Related information
  • Scientists are learning the basic building blocks of sperm whale language after years of effort
  • Coverage of China's basic medical insurance stable
  • China firmly against US, Japan's false narrative on China's nuclear policy
  • Company believes it found sunken barge in Ohio River near Pittsburgh, one of 26 that got loose
  • Party time! Lauren Sanchez celebrates her grand Met Gala debut while mingling with fashion A
  • Two killed in shooting at Ferguson, Missouri, gas station; officer fired shots
  • Zheng eases past Cîrstea in Stuttgart opener after long trip from China. Paolini also through
  • More homes flooded in Russian region bordering Kazakhstan, other areas
Recommended content
  • Lok Sabha elections 2024: Why Modi and BJP face strong resistance in south India
  • Weedkiller manufacturer seeks lawmakers' help to squelch claims it failed to warn about cancer
  • Asian CL semifinal postponed in United Arab Emirates after flooding caused by heavy rain
  • China to carry out third residents' time use survey
  • Greg Norman and Phil Mickelson make for an interesting week on LIV Golf
  • Coverage of China's basic medical insurance stable