There is a prevailing theory that the cilia in our hair cells get damaged, fall over, and maintain an open chemical pathway that makes them like a piano key that is always held down, and that tinnitus start there in the cochlea.
These images were presumably taken using a scanning electron microscope.
I, along with the very intelligent man @Contrast, believe that this is false and that tinnitus starts either in the brain or the dorsal cochlear nucleus. These regions looking, polling, for a signal where none exists.
My points:
1. Is the condition of the damaged cilia in the right image a result of the preparation of the sample to be used in the microscope?
2. If tinnitus sounds originate in the cochlea from "always on" hair cells, then why does mine wildly fluctuate, with my circadian rhythms, and also get influenced by what I am looking at.
3. Why would the cilia fall over like that, like gravity is pulling them down? Aren't they suspended in a fluid, in a spiral shape?
These images were presumably taken using a scanning electron microscope.
I, along with the very intelligent man @Contrast, believe that this is false and that tinnitus starts either in the brain or the dorsal cochlear nucleus. These regions looking, polling, for a signal where none exists.
My points:
1. Is the condition of the damaged cilia in the right image a result of the preparation of the sample to be used in the microscope?
2. If tinnitus sounds originate in the cochlea from "always on" hair cells, then why does mine wildly fluctuate, with my circadian rhythms, and also get influenced by what I am looking at.
3. Why would the cilia fall over like that, like gravity is pulling them down? Aren't they suspended in a fluid, in a spiral shape?