Maison and Liberman recently published an interesting paper on hidden hearing loss in humans (not mice). http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0162726
Additional press coverage here (and many other places too)
http://www.wsj.com/articles/cant-hear-in-noisy-places-its-a-real-medical-condition-1474909624
It has been made clear in a variety of animal models that synapses of the auditory nerve, not hair cells, are the most vulnerable elements in the ear to the effects of environmental noise exposure. Damage to nerve fibers isn't detected by standard hearing tests and thus this type of damage is said to "hide" behind an otherwise normal audiological report. This has been published and discussed already. The trouble has been finding an objective test in humans that is sensitive to this hidden nerve damage and might explain why people with normal thresholds struggle to follow conversations in noisy background conditions (and also explains why they might have tinnitus).
This paper identifies such a measurement, the AP:SP ratio, that correlates with difficulty understanding words in noise in young musicians that are at substantial risk to develop tinnitus and hyperacusis despite their normal thresholds. This measure comes from the very first bumps on the auditory brainstem response. The SP is the summating potential and is thought to be generated by electrical current in the hair cell. The AP is the action potential, the volley of electrical activity that goes through your auditory nerve en route to the brain. In people that struggle to hear speech in noise, ratio of the SP:AP amplitudes is closer to 1.0 (equivalent).
There are a few important ramifications: 1) The standards for "safe" noise exposure levels are probably way off because they are based on a test of hair cell integrity, not nerve fiber loss. 2) Audiologists better should find a way to measure the thing that relates to people's primary complaints, difficulty hearing speech in noise and tinnitus. Maybe this is it. 3) The SP:AP ratio might be a better predictor of tinnitus (and tinnitus relief) than other measures.
Thought you might like to know about this. The paper has some caveats and shortcomings too and I would be happy to describe it's limitations as well if that would be useful.
BUT I also have a question for those of you with tinnitus who are still reading this long post: what is your experience tracking conversations in noise? Is it particularly difficult for you? Did it get worse around the time that your tinnitus became more invasive? I know that was true for me. I think they are closely connected...
Additional press coverage here (and many other places too)
http://www.wsj.com/articles/cant-hear-in-noisy-places-its-a-real-medical-condition-1474909624
It has been made clear in a variety of animal models that synapses of the auditory nerve, not hair cells, are the most vulnerable elements in the ear to the effects of environmental noise exposure. Damage to nerve fibers isn't detected by standard hearing tests and thus this type of damage is said to "hide" behind an otherwise normal audiological report. This has been published and discussed already. The trouble has been finding an objective test in humans that is sensitive to this hidden nerve damage and might explain why people with normal thresholds struggle to follow conversations in noisy background conditions (and also explains why they might have tinnitus).
This paper identifies such a measurement, the AP:SP ratio, that correlates with difficulty understanding words in noise in young musicians that are at substantial risk to develop tinnitus and hyperacusis despite their normal thresholds. This measure comes from the very first bumps on the auditory brainstem response. The SP is the summating potential and is thought to be generated by electrical current in the hair cell. The AP is the action potential, the volley of electrical activity that goes through your auditory nerve en route to the brain. In people that struggle to hear speech in noise, ratio of the SP:AP amplitudes is closer to 1.0 (equivalent).
There are a few important ramifications: 1) The standards for "safe" noise exposure levels are probably way off because they are based on a test of hair cell integrity, not nerve fiber loss. 2) Audiologists better should find a way to measure the thing that relates to people's primary complaints, difficulty hearing speech in noise and tinnitus. Maybe this is it. 3) The SP:AP ratio might be a better predictor of tinnitus (and tinnitus relief) than other measures.
Thought you might like to know about this. The paper has some caveats and shortcomings too and I would be happy to describe it's limitations as well if that would be useful.
BUT I also have a question for those of you with tinnitus who are still reading this long post: what is your experience tracking conversations in noise? Is it particularly difficult for you? Did it get worse around the time that your tinnitus became more invasive? I know that was true for me. I think they are closely connected...