So, I'm not really convinced that hearing regenerative medication will cure our hyperacusis. Especially given most of us with noxacusis have no signs of hearing loss, which leads me to believe something in our brain shifted when we got hyperacusis.
The fact is most people don't get hyperacusis. My partner blew a hole in his eardrum and didn't get it, people on here have gotten it from way less. Some people got it from a neck or brain injury or from major stress. This has to be something wrong with our brains, or else most people would get it.
I'm proposing that we focus our efforts towards finding out what "shifts" rather than hearing regeneration. This would mean advocating for more research into the brain's side of things and donating towards researchers that want to study it. If we could find out what our brain does that causes hyperacusis/noxacusis instead of hearing loss, maybe we could find a way to reverse it.
I'm also still looking towards cochlear destruction as a form of surgery for us. Obviously this would be last resort, but I have a strong hunch it might work for both loudness and pain (inner ear) hyperacusis. It could be the reason why hearing loss, like in @Juan case, can lower the intensity of pain hyperacusis. Likewise with cochlear implants that can destroy the outer hair cells and thereby lower the pain.
Is there anyway we can advocate for this type of surgery? Obviously if the patient was suffering severely and on the brink of suicide. We only have the one report of it being performed and working and that's not much to base anything off of. We won't know this works unless doctors agree to try. Does anyone have any suggestions on where to advocate for this? Can this be experimented with somehow?
The fact is most people don't get hyperacusis. My partner blew a hole in his eardrum and didn't get it, people on here have gotten it from way less. Some people got it from a neck or brain injury or from major stress. This has to be something wrong with our brains, or else most people would get it.
I'm proposing that we focus our efforts towards finding out what "shifts" rather than hearing regeneration. This would mean advocating for more research into the brain's side of things and donating towards researchers that want to study it. If we could find out what our brain does that causes hyperacusis/noxacusis instead of hearing loss, maybe we could find a way to reverse it.
I'm also still looking towards cochlear destruction as a form of surgery for us. Obviously this would be last resort, but I have a strong hunch it might work for both loudness and pain (inner ear) hyperacusis. It could be the reason why hearing loss, like in @Juan case, can lower the intensity of pain hyperacusis. Likewise with cochlear implants that can destroy the outer hair cells and thereby lower the pain.
Is there anyway we can advocate for this type of surgery? Obviously if the patient was suffering severely and on the brink of suicide. We only have the one report of it being performed and working and that's not much to base anything off of. We won't know this works unless doctors agree to try. Does anyone have any suggestions on where to advocate for this? Can this be experimented with somehow?