The meek shall inherit the EarthI've started worshipping nerds. F*** God. He clearly hates me. It's all about the nerd saviours now.
@JohnAdamsSo why hasn't this been released yet???
I think the market won't allow selling an inferior product. If all audiologists sell an inferior product, then one audiologist will sell the superior product to attract customers, and the rest will naturally follow.I don't think audiologists would be excited about a device that could affect their business significantly. It is their livelihood at the end of the day and not being able to sell hearing aids/sound therapy to tinnitus patients will hurt their bottom line.
Hopefully the well being of their patients are more important to them than money.
This is a concern of mine. I live in a fairly major US city and I'm almost certain I won't be able to get it without traveling. As far as I know there is one audiology clinic in this town that caters specifically to tinnitus patients. It's only open 20 hours a week. I've never been there, but their website is plastered with sound therapy stuff. I'll probably send off an email here soon to see just how far they have their heads in the sand.Spoke to an audiologist on the phone today. She did not seem to know about this. At all.
Never know, it could boost sales for audiology outlets. They'll still be selling hearing aids.I don't think audiologists would be excited about a device that could affect their business significantly. It is their livelihood at the end of the day and not being able to sell hearing aids/sound therapy to tinnitus patients will hurt their bottom line.
Hopefully the well being of their patients are more important to them than money.
Eff their livelihoods. How about that?I don't think audiologists would be excited about a device that could affect their business significantly. It is their livelihood at the end of the day and not being able to sell hearing aids/sound therapy to tinnitus patients will hurt their bottom line.
Why is that, do you think?People's attitudes are changing, back in the 80's, 90's everybody was like Michael Leigh praising Jastreboff and habituation, these days demands are rising for real treatments...
Increasing incidence of tinnitus.Why is that, do you think?
That's because a lot of things is placebo for most people. Notice for example how every diet, no matter how different (raw paleo vs raw vegan) makes everyone feel "soo amazing", it's all in their head. When a true cure comes it will probably work for you too.Sometimes, I'm quite excited and optimistic about this device.
At other times, I feel anxious: "and what if it works for everybody else/a lot of people, but not for me?"
I've tried a bunch of stuff, and every time, it seems like everybody has found something to ease their pain: sports, diet, sound therapies (the amount of YouTube videos with comments saying it works to knock people's tinnitus down is amazing).
In my case, nothing seems to work, I identified what makes my tinnitus worse (lack of sleep, stress, illness, etc.) but not what makes it better. I can be in perfect shape, eat well, sleep well, be relaxed, but still have my tinnitus screaming in my ears, and sometimes, I might be really tired, but it calms down for no reason.
So I'm kind of worried that this too won't work for me, in which case, since I don't feel like anything else is coming anytime soon, it would lead to a desperate situation.
If only I was sure this thing would work, I would already be the happiest man on earth and time wouldn't matter that much. But not knowing for sure makes the wait excruciating and this whole thing both hopeful and stressful.
Anyone else feels the same?
I think everybody does.Anyone else feels the same?
I'm not sure I do though. I have multiple tones in each ear, not a single tone. My tinnitus can change from mild to high (although it's been high for a few months now), and it has some somatic properties (when I clench my jaw, or yawn, it makes a part of it louder, but not all).If you meet the criteria that was included in the trials then you automatically have a chance of it working.
As Dr. Ross O'Neill said when Steve asked about tones - number of tones/pitch/tonality - he replied that doesn't matter.I'm not sure I do though. I have multiple tones in each ear, not a single tone. My tinnitus can change from mild to high (although it's been high for a few months now), and it has some somatic properties (when I clench my jaw, or yawn, it makes a part of it louder, but not all).
Would that comply?
All of this is pure conjecture/speculation. Why not just wait until the device is released and we get real patient testimonials? For all we know we could be in for a sore disappointment... another ACRN but better marketed and "tested"The burning question for responders is that would continued/longer use of this treatment - eventually make the tinnitus disappear altogether? I don't want to get too carried away, and I think Dr. Ross O'Neill was being modest when he said that they needed to be responsible for suggesting a cure, but there were people who said that it went away. The older dear said hers was gone.
I will certainly be using it past the 12 weeks period if it just keeps going down and down to see if it would disappear. I mean if you're driving neuroplasticity by doing it over and over again, then why not. But I'll also be happy with a reduction.
IT'S IMPORTANT TO NOTE that this was only tested for 12 weeks at 60 minutes a day. They can only report the data they've got. So they wouldn't know, but would logic say continued use would correspond to continued improvement?
It's also like would tinnitus eventually return after the 12 month mark... so many questions and not enough answers.
But @Paulmanlike has many good points and he keeps this alive with very informative and healthy speculations while we wait. I think he is spot on on what we might expect from this and being cautiously optimistic. I would like to thank him for it.All of this is pure conjecture/speculation. Why not just wait until the device is released and we get real patient testimonials? For all we know we could be in for a sore disappointment... another ACRN but better marketed and "tested"
Yes I remember, although one may think that the more tones you have the more complex your « neuronal situation » is. But yes I will stop overthinking, you are right. That's my biggest issue in life lol.As @hans799 explained earlier this treatment isn't aimed at targeting the tinnitus tones (like ACRN for example). It's aimed at on changing the neurons right through the auditory system to where sound is processed (mid brain, brain stem, thalamus, auditory cortex). So the tones and how many there are would not matter.
That's good to know. Although if nothing happened to me within 12 weeks I think I would start to freak out.Also, I forgot her name, but there was one girl who was in the trial, who said during the trial she thought it didn't do anything. Then, after the trial ended, she started to see improvement on her tinnitus all of a sudden. So, even if you use that thing for 12 weeks and nothing happens, doesn't mean it can't improve afterwards.
While you could be right, there is little chance (from my understanding) that this will be in the same camp. I may not have been around for ACRN, but Dr. Susan Shore is highly respected, and when everyone in the community was shocked by her findings, I think she really did find something special.All of this is pure conjecture/speculation. Why not just wait until the device is released and we get real patient testimonials? For all we know we could be in for a sore disappointment... another ACRN but better marketed and "tested"
Your anxiety plays a huge role in your tinnitus perception. I notice that sometimes (and it feels like for no reason) my tones change and get harder to mask, but really I know it's the same all the time. Working with CBT and therapy of any kind will help your perception, so you should really give that a shot.Yes I remember, although one may think that the more tones you have the more complex your « neuronal situation » is. But yes I will stop overthinking, you are right. That's my biggest issue in life lol.
Thanks for the answer.
I'm not sure why Susan Shore made all those headlines last year, but I assume it's because she was the first to grasp bimodal stimulation (from what I can gather). Neuromod lists her studies in rats as a big proponent, as well as Hubert Lim's studies. I'm unsure who truly discovered bimodal stimulation but either way hers caught on last year in a big way.@TimmyC
Who was it that came up with bimodal neuromodulation in the first place? From what I understand, Shore's work came from University of Michigan. The only difference I see between Shore and Lim is that Shore's is based on auditory and somatosensory neuromodulation whereas Lim's is auditory stimulation and trigeminal nerve stimulation. But both have the same alleged mechanism of action.
That being said, Shore has only got a pilot study of 20 people whereas Lim and Neuromod have 3 trials wrapping up of over 500 patients.
With Shore's completion date being 2022/23 of her 100 patient study - hers appears to be well lagging behind. Although she made headlines with that 20 patient study, Neuromod don't appear to have made any headlines with all these trials.
Why did Shore make headlines while Neuromod's trials have remained elusive?
I never quite understood this perception thing. In my case, some tones in the right ear can flare up, or disappear. When they do (disappear), even if I lock myself in a quiet room and try to carefully listen and look for them, they are not there, purely and simply. In other cases (most of the time), they pierce through any loud masking audio I might have.Your anxiety plays a huge role in your tinnitus perception. I notice that sometimes (and it feels like for no reason) my tones change and get harder to mask, but really I know it's the same all the time. Working with CBT and therapy of any kind will help your perception, so you should really give that a shot.