I thought I'd do a brief recap on the state of deep brain stimulation trials as of June 2022:
There are two trials going on in Europe, one from
Maastricht University in the Netherlands, and one from the
University Hospital in Grenoble, France. No data is available yet, and it is unclear to me what phase these trials are on.
There has also been a
Phase 1 trial in the U.S., completed in 2019.
Here's the article that describes the trial. Although the procedure is extremely invasive, it appeared to be relatively safe, with no adverse events reported (except for one patient, but that was apparently unrelated to the procedure), and reasonably effective. I haven't found any more information regarding a phase II of this study so I am assuming it is in limbo, but I'll reach out to the investigators to learn more.
Whether DBS simply treats the distress caused by tinnitus or actually lowers tinnitus volume is unclear. I've read conflicting anecdotal reports in this form (one was a
secondhand account from a participant of the Maastricht trial, and the other was a
firsthand report from a participant of the U.S. study).
Here's something I've been thinking: I remember that there was a paper on
non-invasive deep brain stimulation that made some big waves in 2017. It seems the technology is promising but needs some fine-tuning (I found a
2020 paper that suggests improvements on the tech). I find this approach fascinating, but it seems so far no one has tried to use it to treat tinnitus. I wonder why. I think I know a researcher I can ask this question to; I'll post their response here if I hear back.