Compared to tinnitus, hyperacusis is even less understood. To encourage greater understanding, an international hyperacusis conference was held earlier this year. Let's hope the conferences continue and lead to more research interest. If anything is worse than tinnitus, it must be hyperacusis and tinnitus.
Noise Health. 2014 Mar-Apr;16(69):123-6. doi: 10.4103/1463-1741.132100.
Insights from the First International Conference on Hyperacusis: causes, evaluation, diagnosis and treatment.
Aazh H1, McFerran D, Salvi R, Prasher D, Jastreboff M, Jastreboff P.
Author information
Abstract
The First International Conference on Hyperacusis gathered over 100 scientists and health care professionals in London, UK. Key conclusions from the conference included: (1) Hyperacusis is characterized by reduced tolerance of sound that has perceptual, psychological and social dimensions; (2) there is a growing awareness that children as well as adults experience symptoms of hyperacusis or misophonia; (3) the exact mechanisms that give rise to hyperacusis are not clear, but the available evidence suggests that functional changes within the central nervous system are important and in particular, hyperacusis may be related to increased gain in the central auditory pathways and to increased anxiety or emotional response to sound; (4) various counseling and sound therapy approaches seem beneficial in the management of hyperacusis, but the evidence base for these remains poor.
For the text article, click here.
Reference: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24804717
Noise Health. 2014 Mar-Apr;16(69):123-6. doi: 10.4103/1463-1741.132100.
Insights from the First International Conference on Hyperacusis: causes, evaluation, diagnosis and treatment.
Aazh H1, McFerran D, Salvi R, Prasher D, Jastreboff M, Jastreboff P.
Author information
Abstract
The First International Conference on Hyperacusis gathered over 100 scientists and health care professionals in London, UK. Key conclusions from the conference included: (1) Hyperacusis is characterized by reduced tolerance of sound that has perceptual, psychological and social dimensions; (2) there is a growing awareness that children as well as adults experience symptoms of hyperacusis or misophonia; (3) the exact mechanisms that give rise to hyperacusis are not clear, but the available evidence suggests that functional changes within the central nervous system are important and in particular, hyperacusis may be related to increased gain in the central auditory pathways and to increased anxiety or emotional response to sound; (4) various counseling and sound therapy approaches seem beneficial in the management of hyperacusis, but the evidence base for these remains poor.
For the text article, click here.
Reference: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24804717