Actually I just talked to an audiologist, and he says that centralization isn't a very sound argument, he said that it doesn't mean your tinnitus is permanent, and that there isn't much research into it being actually valid. Interesting..It happens no matter how small the tinnitus is and even if it's only in one ear.
Nobody really knows when it starts but by month 12 it should have centralized by then. If you hear white noise while in a very quiet room then that's actually quiet normal and you might've had it for years but didn't notice it until now. Almost everyone experiences "tinnitus" when in a soundproof room.
Actually I just talked to an audiologist, and he says that centralization isn't a very sound argument, he said that it doesn't mean your tinnitus is permanent, and that there isn't much research into it being actually valid. Interesting..
In this study, we show that when recovery time after acoustic trauma is extended to 8 and 12 weeks, cochlear ablation does not significantly decrease the increased spontaneous activity measured in the inferior colliculus. This result demonstrates for the first time that central hyperactivity that develops after acoustic trauma transitions from an early stage when it is dependent on continued peripheral afferent input to a later stage in which the hyperactivity is intrinsically generated within the central nervous system.
After surgical removal of acoustic tumours with excision of the auditory nerve in 414 patients, only 40% reported improvement in their tinnitus. Of 68 patients undergoing translabyrinthine eighth nerve section, 60 (80%) had tinnitus preoperatively. Improvement occurred in 45%, while 55% reported the condition to be the same or worse.
Does centralization always kicks in?
I haven't found any studies that says that it always kicks in. It just seems to be much more likely to have happened as time passes by. By the one year mark tinnitus is considered permanent. Even if conductive hearing caused the issue and is restored a few months to a year later the tinnitus tends to stay. It's also thought that when tinnitus in only one ear sounds like it's coming from both then that's centralization at work.
This is why normal auditory input to the primary auditory cortex in the brain needs to be restored ASAP if there is hearing loss since it could stop this from happening. In fact any constant input in the impacted frequencies might work. A doubt a pill is going to be able to fix this problem.
There's also this to keep in mind "For most people with unilateral tinnitus, if you try hard enough to hear the tinnitus in the non-affected ear, you'll eventually perceive some very slight tinnitus in that side. This is normal and is entirely driven by the way that our auditory pathways work - they have many points of crossover from ear to ear. The more you listen for it, the more it will seemingly appear. Just FYI."
I haven't found any studies that says that it always kicks in. It just seems to be much more likely to have happened as time passes by. By the one year mark tinnitus is considered permanent.
Audiologists are known to not keep up with the latest news.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21723924
Tinnitus can still persist even when the auditory nerve is cut. It's so well known that cutting the auditory nerve is no longer recommended for fixing tinnitus. What more evidence do you need? There's clearly centralization.
Even in 1981 this was known to happen.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/6915835
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0378595512002468
There's also this to keep in mind "For most people with unilateral tinnitus, if you try hard enough to hear the tinnitus in the non-affected ear, you'll eventually perceive some very slight tinnitus in that side. This is normal and is entirely driven by the way that our auditory pathways work - they have many points of crossover from ear to ear. The more you listen for it, the more it will seemingly appear. Just FYI."