I thought you said are habituated (for the most part) and that you are not so bothered with it.. has something changed?@Sjoerd I`m just too sick and tired of T to even question things so deep anymore ... need something.
I thought you said are habituated (for the most part) and that you are not so bothered with it.. has something changed?@Sjoerd I`m just too sick and tired of T to even question things so deep anymore ... need something.
I thought you said are habituated (for the most part) and that you are not so bothered with it.. has something changed?
Hi! I think MuteButton uses TNS (Trigeminal Nerve Stimulation) so they say, and they say that MuteButton is a new aproach to treatment of tinnitus.
Too good to be true?
We have no way of knowing
I think this is based in neuromodulation
like the VNS (vagus nerve stimulation) system from the microtransponder company
I'm hopeful about these new technologies.
Sjoerd, Thanks for the clarification. It is a big difference as you say.
I meant that both approaches are based on neuronal plasticity. Groups of
Jos Eggermont and Dexter Irvine showed the influence of neuronal plasticity in the origin of tinnitus and later the group of Michael Kilgard from the University of Texas at Dallas were able to remove Tinnitus in rats by VNS.
I dont know nothing more. I hope they both, VNS and TNS will work
Sorry my friends, if I bored you to death
I enjoy reading this kind of stuff and trying to understand it
Yes instead of all this discussing opinions that would be great and it is actually the only reason i keep checking this thread the vain hope of someone testing the device already.Do we have any feedback from anybody in Ireland who has purchased one?
My audiologist was talking about MuteButton today. Still not available in the U.S.
She also mentioned another new device ... "oto" something, sorry I didn't write it down! -- that appears somewhat similar to Neuromonics. But you use it while you sleep. She said she hadn't seen enough research on it yet to recommend it and, like Neuromonics, its expensive.
She meant this most likely:She also mentioned another new device ... "oto" something, sorry I didn't write it down!
check my last few posts in this thread, it should be more clear how Mutebutton works after reading them.Hi @marqualler: She said she was keeping her eye on MuteButton and thinks it has potential. But like you, she said she hadn't seen enough research yet to show it is effective and worth the price. Maybe that will change by the time it gets to the States.
Same problem with Otoharmonics (thanks, @Markku, that's it). There has been one study of 11 people, too small to tell much of anything. Seems to be a recurring problem re. all devices currently on the market. They are expensive. Yet there are few, if any, independently based, large studies that show they work.
Re. MuteButton: Are you actually stimulating the vagus nerve in particular? Or are you distracting your brain from tinnitus by offering alternative sensory neurological stimulation? I thought they had to go into your neck somewhere to get to the vagus (what the folks in Dallas are testing now).
Nobody knows how this is supposed to work.... For the record, this has nothing to do with the research of Micheal Kilgard and microtransponder (Dallas).Re. MuteButton: Are you actually stimulating the vagus nerve in particular? Or are you distracting your brain from tinnitus by offering alternative sensory neurological stimulation? I thought they had to go into your neck somewhere to get to the vagus (what the folks in Dallas are testing now).
I have bought Mutebutton in mid January and am using it a half hour per day. The 10 week period will be early April. I will report back then.