Hair Cell Regeneration right now is entirely speculative about its outcomes in humans. The notion that regenerating hair cells leads to an improved hearing is entirely speculative too. Researchers believe this to be the case because when birds are deafened and their hair cells are grown back they are able to recognize the same calls as they were before. Hence, the reasoning is this same principle applies to humans. However, this could easily not be the case. There could be some auditory process in the brain that is altered when hearing is lossed.
I don't think there is any reason to believe that a re-grown hair will be diminished in quality if it's exactly like a pristine one. However, this is speculative.
@tomytl He's saying, that imagine you have a 70 decibel loss flat across all the measured frequencies or just some. Then the best you could do is go back to 20 to 25 decibel loss. That is a huge improvement though. But no one knows how much hearing targeted specific regenerative medicine for the ear will restore or what frequencies it might be most effective at.
I'm also not aware of any stem cell or laser therapy that has been able to demonstrate a significant improvement in hearing though.
Thanks NeoM for you expertise.
I thought, they could also functional regenerate hearing in mammals... but I guess, it's a kind of
difficult to ask them about the quality.
So we have to wait until it's in the human trials. It's anyway a kind of difficult to imagine such a
procedere... But there are so many biotech companies, so one might be successful one day.
Greets tomytl