Hey guys,
My tinnitus started around 2017 from loud headphone use and clubbing. I tried oral Prednisolone, but apart from leaving me on edge, I noticed it distorted my hearing in certain frequencies. I could scale up a piano and find the exact note/pitch that would give me a "feedback" effect in my hearing. I stopped the steroids immediately. Thankfully, everything mostly died down to very manageable levels. The distortion disappeared, too.
I would describe my tinnitus volume at only 1-2 now. Sometimes goes up to a 3 or 4 with a spike. Interestingly, if there's an environmental noise present such as a fan or fridge, moving or turning my head in a certain direction can influence the loudness. Fortunately, I can still wear foam earplugs to sleep and the level goes right down to a 1. I'm lucky, and I don't take take it for granted.
This brings me to my point. I've been researching this for a few years, and I'm absolutely certain tinnitus will be "cured" at some point in future. The likes of Dr. Shore's device will hopefully alleviate and lessen the noise for some people, but I think brain implants like Neuralink will be the fix eventually. There's already plenty of information and research supporting this theory, a lot of which you already know.
Consider the following: brain implants (and by extension "transhumanism") are controversial subjects. There's many conspiracy theories about it being a slippery slope, particularly in regards to humans eventually merging with AI. Therefore, they'll want and need successful use cases of this technology for "easier" ailments and diseases at first, before more sophisticated applications are considered by the wider public. Tinnitus is absolutely something I would consider to fall into such a category. I believe Elon Musk even said "100%" when asked about Neuralink curing tinnitus.
I know there was a joke post here before about Neuralink ending up a "subscription service", where one would have to keep up monthly payments to keep their tinnitus switched off. It's funny, but I honestly wouldn't rule out such a business model, lol. Ultimately though, I consider the solution to this an inevitability with Neuralink and similar in future. Hopefully most can find relief with other devices that come before.
Best wishes to all suffering with tinnitus; I know how disturbing and depressing this sh*t can be.
Shaun
My tinnitus started around 2017 from loud headphone use and clubbing. I tried oral Prednisolone, but apart from leaving me on edge, I noticed it distorted my hearing in certain frequencies. I could scale up a piano and find the exact note/pitch that would give me a "feedback" effect in my hearing. I stopped the steroids immediately. Thankfully, everything mostly died down to very manageable levels. The distortion disappeared, too.
I would describe my tinnitus volume at only 1-2 now. Sometimes goes up to a 3 or 4 with a spike. Interestingly, if there's an environmental noise present such as a fan or fridge, moving or turning my head in a certain direction can influence the loudness. Fortunately, I can still wear foam earplugs to sleep and the level goes right down to a 1. I'm lucky, and I don't take take it for granted.
This brings me to my point. I've been researching this for a few years, and I'm absolutely certain tinnitus will be "cured" at some point in future. The likes of Dr. Shore's device will hopefully alleviate and lessen the noise for some people, but I think brain implants like Neuralink will be the fix eventually. There's already plenty of information and research supporting this theory, a lot of which you already know.
Consider the following: brain implants (and by extension "transhumanism") are controversial subjects. There's many conspiracy theories about it being a slippery slope, particularly in regards to humans eventually merging with AI. Therefore, they'll want and need successful use cases of this technology for "easier" ailments and diseases at first, before more sophisticated applications are considered by the wider public. Tinnitus is absolutely something I would consider to fall into such a category. I believe Elon Musk even said "100%" when asked about Neuralink curing tinnitus.
I know there was a joke post here before about Neuralink ending up a "subscription service", where one would have to keep up monthly payments to keep their tinnitus switched off. It's funny, but I honestly wouldn't rule out such a business model, lol. Ultimately though, I consider the solution to this an inevitability with Neuralink and similar in future. Hopefully most can find relief with other devices that come before.
Best wishes to all suffering with tinnitus; I know how disturbing and depressing this sh*t can be.
Shaun