I myself have moderate to severe tinnitus that came on after an acoustic shock but on a standard audiogram my max drop is 15 dB for a single frequency, and 10 dB or less for everything else. I'm aware of extended audiograms and hearing loss that may occur above 8 kHz, however excluding that, I'm curious if I am at all unique in having bad tinnitus and a "strong" standard audiogram.
My primary concern is that I'd like to benefit from the seeming advent of regenerative medicine we are experiencing, but I wonder if restoring hearing will be beneficial for me given I don't have what would normally be considered heavy loss.
As a bonus, assuming we gain the ability to restore hair cells and synapses, should we target 0 dB audiograms as an ideal? How do we know where to draw the line?
My primary concern is that I'd like to benefit from the seeming advent of regenerative medicine we are experiencing, but I wonder if restoring hearing will be beneficial for me given I don't have what would normally be considered heavy loss.
As a bonus, assuming we gain the ability to restore hair cells and synapses, should we target 0 dB audiograms as an ideal? How do we know where to draw the line?