I'm just going to speak to this directly since my old posts are buried under years of cruft. The trial was in early 2016.
This is what I remember, from the 4-week non-placebo trial (which I correctly guessed was not placebo on about day 15):
- Days 1-7: zero change at all, distress and volume ratings around 7/10.
- Days 7-14: my subjective daily ratings of both volume and distress decrease slightly.
- Days 15-30: subjective ratings continue to fall, bottoming out around a 4-5 for volume and a 2-3 for distress. For me this gets into "super liveable, barely notice this". Note that I had lived with minor tinnitus for a decade or more prior to my 2010 trauma.
- Days 31-40: Device use discontinued, tinnitus slowly reasserts itself back to baseline.
Eh. Apples and oranges. Just because the DCN has become hyperactive doesn't mean that surgically removing or degrading it will solve the problem, it may just push the aberrant neuroplastic attempts at regaining homeostasis into other structures or make them permanent.
I don't think research to do with
retraining the DCN (UMich, etc) has a ton to do with research on
ablating it, any more than research on things which improve cardiac health have a ton to do with research on removing parts of the heart muscle and replacing with a pacemaker. Very, very different modalities targeting the same physiological region.
Of course, I can hardly be considered an unbiased source, because I used the UMich thing and strongly believe it works for me. Just my .02.