When the sound of tinnitus goes away for most people who had noise-induced tinnitus, that's either the neurons completely dying that were involved in the injury or the brain can adapt to this sound so the patient doesn't hear it as loudly as they did before. More likely the nuerons have died.this info brought me some peace... hope it does the same for you.
noise induced T is almost always stable over time. (see link #1).
link #1: http://www.tinnitusjournal.com/detalhe_artigo.asp?id=125 "Stability Over Time
The vast majority of patients with noise trauma described their tinnitus as high-pitched and stable over time. We noted, however, that the few patients who described their tinnitus as fluctuating over time had generally had their tinnitus for a shorter period (2 ± 2 years versus 7.9 ± 11.9 years for stable tinnitus). This being the case, we propose two hypotheses: (1) Fluctuating tinnitus tends to stabilize after a certain length of time or (2) fluctuating tinnitus may disappear, whereas longstanding tinnitus is stable. Only a longitudinal study of tinnitus patients will allow us to clarify these hypotheses further."
also, it's not considered permanent until you've had it for two years. (see link #2).
link #2: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2686891/ "Natural course
Noise-induced tinnitus can be acute or chronic. Acute tinnitus can last from a few minutes to a few weeks after noise exposure.24 In some cases, tinnitus has a gradual onset and several years can pass before an intermittent, low-intensity tinnitus becomes bothersome.25 Spontaneous remission by natural habituation is experienced by more than three-quarters of sufferers. Habituation occurs within the CNS, whereas adaptation involves a peripheral sensory organ.8 For those in whom the condition worsens, the tinnitus intensity increases over time but its pitch tends to remain stable.22 If tinnitus persists for more than 2 years, it is considered permanent and irreversible.26 However, chronicity is not associated with a favorable response to treatment."[/QUOT
how do you know this?When the sound of tinnitus goes away for most people who had noise-induced tinnitus, that's either the neurons completely dying that were involved in the injury or the brain can adapt to this sound so the patient doesn't hear it as loudly as they did before. More likely the nuerons have died.
There are articles which feature researchers claiming that such a thing happens.how do you know this?
Well first off neurons that die as of scientifically now can't be brought back. Noise damages the nerve fibers connected to thousands of the hair like cells in a much more hidden way unlike the hair cells which damage can be seen through audiogram tests.@Nick Pyzik is it "bad" if the neurons died off? what is the effect for us?
this info brought me some peace... hope it does the same for you.
noise induced T is almost always stable over time. (see link #1).
link #1: http://www.tinnitusjournal.com/detalhe_artigo.asp?id=125 "Stability Over Time
The vast majority of patients with noise trauma described their tinnitus as high-pitched and stable over time. We noted, however, that the few patients who described their tinnitus as fluctuating over time had generally had their tinnitus for a shorter period (2 ± 2 years versus 7.9 ± 11.9 years for stable tinnitus). This being the case, we propose two hypotheses: (1) Fluctuating tinnitus tends to stabilize after a certain length of time or (2) fluctuating tinnitus may disappear, whereas longstanding tinnitus is stable. Only a longitudinal study of tinnitus patients will allow us to clarify these hypotheses further."
also, it's not considered permanent until you've had it for two years. (see link #2).
link #2: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2686891/ "Natural course
Noise-induced tinnitus can be acute or chronic. Acute tinnitus can last from a few minutes to a few weeks after noise exposure.24 In some cases, tinnitus has a gradual onset and several years can pass before an intermittent, low-intensity tinnitus becomes bothersome.25 Spontaneous remission by natural habituation is experienced by more than three-quarters of sufferers. Habituation occurs within the CNS, whereas adaptation involves a peripheral sensory organ.8 For those in whom the condition worsens, the tinnitus intensity increases over time but its pitch tends to remain stable.22 If tinnitus persists for more than 2 years, it is considered permanent and irreversible.26 However, chronicity is not associated with a favorable response to treatment."
Well first off neurons that die as of scientifically now can't be brought back. Noise damages the nerve fibers connected to thousands of the hair like cells in a much more hidden way unlike the hair cells which damage can be seen through audiogram tests.
As talked about in the article below, the auditory system of our brain is lined up through plasticity. These neurons located in the auditory portions of the brain follow a pathway through the auditory nerve and then connect to each specific location of the inner and outer hair cells. Nerve fibers can connect to one another and more than one can connect to outer hair cells and some to inner hair cells. Much more can connect to the outer than do to the inner.
http://www.buffalo.edu/news/releases/2012/06/13479.html
The issue that comes to my mind with neurons of the auditory system dying, this being involved with the ringing in ours coming from noise-induced damage, and how our hearing seems to be routed all throughout the brain and not just in the auditory system, what does this do to the brain over time? Why does the brain have to reroute itself to produce new nerves to try and continue to function as a normal auditory processing system, and why does the brain have to change its emotional regions that were associated with our hearing in the first place.
I'm still trying to understand the consequences of tinnitus, the brains adaptation to this hearing change, and how it affects the brains ability to continue functioning everyday.
All I can say is that I don't think this adapting depending on the severity of the tinnitus is a good thing.
Thanks for reaching out to me Genevieve. You're correct about the inner and outer hair cells. If damaged enough, they will not function properly or as I've seen in diagrams, there will be a retraction of the cell and spiral ganglion neurons associated with those hair cells until the process has reached the inner regions of the limbic system/auditory cortex and from there the neurons will begin to die if not fed Neurotrophic Factors like NT-3. The two most important parts of our hearing are the hair cells and the auditory nerve/spiral ganglion neurons. It's been found that as we age or most importantly, as we lose our outgoing auditory nerves from something like loud noise, New nerves do grow towards the hair cells of the cochlea again to make up for the lost input of the ingoing nerves, so you are correct about that. But unfortunately, these new nerves don't act at all like the previous ones. They act as faulty outgoing nerves that don't allow the brain to pick up sound correctly like the previous in going nerves did. That is why for example, the elderly still have issues with processing sounds they hear in noisy environments even with hearing aids in. Hearing aids only amplify noise which in turn will cause larger reactions of the hair cell bundles causing them to move more vigorously and create mechanical sound wave energy into electrical, but with these incorrect out going nerves, they are not allowing the brain to emotionally and fundamentally process the hair cell frequency it is associated with.I have read that also in an article recently, they were calling that " hidden hearing loss" or something like that, that explains why so many of us have tinnitus with a " normal audiogram " but I thought that nerve fibers unlike hair cells could regenerate after a couple of months which is not the case for hair cells, am I right here or not? And also I still cannot understand why some people have great hearing loss but no tinnitus at all! Thank you so much @Nick Pyzik for your research and link!
(by the way I use a lot of google translate in order to make correct sentences in English and it's so exhausting for my nerves fibers! )
Thanks for reaching out to me Genevieve. You're correct about the inner and outer hair cells. If damaged enough, they will not function properly or as I've seen in diagrams, there will be a retraction of the cell and spiral ganglion neurons associated with those hair cells until the process has reached the inner regions of the limbic system/auditory cortex and from there the neurons will begin to die if not fed Neurotrophic Factors like NT-3. The two most important parts of our hearing are the hair cells and the auditory nerve/spiral ganglion neurons. It's been found that as we age or most importantly, as we lose our outgoing auditory nerves from something like loud noise, New nerves do grow towards the hair cells of the cochlea again to make up for the lost input of the ingoing nerves, so you are correct about that. But unfortunately, these new nerves don't act at all like the previous ones. They act as faulty outgoing nerves that don't allow the brain to pick up sound correctly like the previous in going nerves did. That is why for example, the elderly still have issues with processing sounds they hear in noisy environments even with hearing aids in. Hearing aids only amplify noise which in turn will cause larger reactions of the hair cell bundles causing them to move more vigorously and create mechanical sound wave energy into electrical, but with these incorrect out going nerves, they are not allowing the brain to emotionally and fundamentally process the hair cell frequency it is associated with.
Here is a link to the study talking about these new outgoing nerves: http://www.hopkinsmedicine.org/news...y_new_contributor_to_age_related_hearing_loss
Let me know if you have anymore questions.
Hey Alue. I regret to say that there is a fault in the ABR test. I wouldn't be stating that there was a fault if my hearing test did not come out as negative with no signs of damage to my auditory nerve. As I learned that outgoing nerves form in place of the once ingoing nerves that were there before being damaged, the ABR test is not going to record any of those faulty signals. As long as you have a healthy set of inner/outer hair cells and enough nerves connecting the hair cells to auditory portion of your brain, there will be no signs of damage, even with all outgoing auditory nerve fibers. There is just no test to record such hidden changes in the neurons of our hearing.Does an ABR test reveal anything new that you wouldn't see on an audiogram? I was going to have one but because of my noise sensitivity the audiologist called it off (there are loud noises involved in the test). She didn't want to make the condition worse as a result of the test, which is responsible.
I'm just not sure if it would reveal any useful information.