My Posting Place

Don't know if someone already posted that link (published 2012).

Good explanation about severe/profound hearing loss in the cochlea concerning epithelium condition.

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3637947/

On one hand it says that severe to profound hearing loss patients are potential candidates for hair cell regeneration on the other hand things like Atoh1 didnt work in such damaged areas but I dont know much about Atoh1 so I cant comment on this anyway....
I read this article, I think comprehensive hearing regeneration is way too complicated and I wonder if it will occur anytime soon at all. I think it'll take the better part of a century.
Maybe limited, partial regeneration will be a reality soon(er).
 
I read this article, I think comprehensive hearing regeneration is way too complicated and I wonder if it will occur anytime soon at all. I think it'll take the better part of a century.
Maybe limited, partial regeneration will be a reality soon(er).

I hope and wish and pray and dream that FX TX be a grand slam, but I'm not holding my breath.
 
Maybe limited, partial regeneration will be a reality soon(er).

I know its frustrating....when you have severe to profound hearing loss and Tinnitus....you already feel unlucky...if you read they might be able to restore something but you need <=50db to be able to restore it...it sounds like a bad joke...
 
I know its frustrating....when you have severe to profound hearing loss and Tinnitus....you already feel unlucky...if you read they might be able to restore something but you need <=50db to be able to restore it...it sounds like a bad joke...

Can you elaborate?
 
https://tonakitinnitusprotocol.com/...toh&subid3=fuckdanieltoh&subid2=fuckdanieltoh

I got several IP banned from tonaki tinnitus protocols and several other if not all of Daniel Toh's websites for running url request like this, he got the message.

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https://globenewswire.com/news-rele...ical-Trial-for-the-Treatment-of-Tinnitus.html

"Tinnitus is the number One Disability for Veterans. Tinnitus is the most common service related disability among veterans, with over 1.5 million American veterans receiving disability payments for intolerable tinnitus. 60% of veterans returning from Iraq & Afghanistan come home with hearing loss and tinnitus based on information from www.hearinghealthfoundaton.org. With tinnitus claims increasing at an annual rate of 15%, the total cost per year to the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs for tinnitus related compensation to veterans is expected to have exceeded 3 billion dollars in 2017."

I thought Tinnitus wasn't considered a disability in the states? Three billion dollars for tinnitus related disability to veterans! That's a lot of money. Does anyone know why veterans can get tinnitus disability, but everyone else can't?
 

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