If I understood correctly, both by disturbed behavior (and being less distressed after treatment) as well as brain scans.How do they know it worked on guinea pigs? Let me guess, the guinea pigs were more happy in life.
If I understood correctly, both by disturbed behavior (and being less distressed after treatment) as well as brain scans.How do they know it worked on guinea pigs? Let me guess, the guinea pigs were more happy in life.
I have a dominant high-pitch intrusive frequency plus barrage of other stuff. The barrage of other stuff I was habituated to for 25 years and it was honestly not problematic at all (habituation first time round took about 2-3 years).I would imagine those of us who have a barrage of different tones will need to start with the easiest one to match and try to remove/reduce them one-by-one... pulling the curtain back on each one so to speak.
Hi all,I have a dominant high-pitch intrusive frequency plus barrage of other stuff. The barrage of other stuff I was habituated to for 25 years and it was honestly not problematic at all (habituation first time round took about 2-3 years).
Pure speculation, but it may be the case that this device only needs to tackle a single dominant frequency for natural habituation to anything that may remain being much easier for people.
I've having trouble finding that data line in her study. All I see are aggregated data in the paper. Can you point me to the 60% benefitting citation?Phase 1 had 12/20 patients (60%) benefitting.
I just read an article from 2018 where they stated out of a study of 20 people, 2 had complete elimination and 11 had reduction.I've having trouble finding that data line in her study. All I see are aggregated data in the paper. Can you point me to the 60% benefitting citation?
As someone with a piercing tinnitus tone above 12 kHz, I'm disappointed that their device only goes that high. I appreciate that they're hopeful that it will help those with higher pitched tones, but the fact that they do tone matching at all tells me it's likely an important factor.I'm posting the lab clinicians response that I'm still trying to decipher as a layman.
Please feel free to offer your input but at a least from what I gather it seems he was more confident that the focus on the DCN as the driver of tinnitus activity was more significant to benefiting users than the pitch match, tone or cause of tinnitus. Again I realize this a very oversimplified response.
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So only 60% of people benefited from the device in the small trial? Seems low... Any trials after that which had a higher benefiting rate?I just read an article from 2018 where they stated out of a study of 20 people, 2 had complete elimination and 11 had reduction.
Source:
[DailyMail.co.uk] Do YOU suffer from tinnitus? Study reveals 'resetting' brain cells using electric currents can alleviate the misery of phantom sounds
That was the only human trial other than the one that is ongoing.So only 60% of people benefited from the device in the small trial? Seems low... Any trials after that which had a higher benefiting rate?
60% of people improving doesn't seem too promising to me. I thought almost everyone had their tinnitus reduced in half... I read that on here before.That was the only human trial other than the one that is ongoing.
I guess we'll find out in a few months. 60% is exactly 60% more than what we have now.60% of people improving doesn't seem too promising to me. I thought almost everyone had their tinnitus reduced in half... I read that on here before.
You should note that whether you get any sort of reduction or not depends on the amount of time you spend using the device. For some, they see results immediately after using it while, for others, it takes several weeks. The trial in question was only for four weeks. This new trial I believe goes up to six weeks of use.60% of people improving doesn't seem too promising to me. I thought almost everyone had their tinnitus reduced in half... I read that on here before.
This is already starting to sound like Lenire 2.0...I just read an article from 2018 where they stated out of a study of 20 people, 2 had complete elimination and 11 had reduction.
Please don't compare Susan Shore to Lenire. Susan has been studying tinnitus for 20 years and she is really trying to helps us. Lenire only cares about making money, they didn't even do a real clinical trial like Susan Shore is doing.This is already starting to sound like Lenire 2.0...
I'm not saying that Susan Shore isn't trying to help people. The fact that she responds to people's emails so quickly shows to me that she does care.Please don't compare Susan Shore to Lenire. Susan has been studying tinnitus for 20 years and she is really trying to helps us. Lenire only cares about making money, they didn't even do a real clinical trial like Susan Shore is doing.
This is what I thought as well.I thought having read through the paper that the 12 dB reeducation was an average across the groups. Does that mean that 40% had no reduction but those that did respond have an even greater than 12 dB response?
Well it's 65% if that helps.60% of people improving doesn't seem too promising to me. I thought almost everyone had their tinnitus reduced in half... I read that on here before.
A clinical trial is going on at the moment with 400 participants, source:I'm not saying that Susan Shore isn't trying to help people. The fact that she responds to people's emails so quickly shows to me that she does care.
But seriously, how many million dollars in funding and the best we can get is a 20 person study with only 11 showing ANY improvement? That doesn't sound any better than Lenire's numbers.
I really hope that Shore has been able to refine the efficacy of her device over the last few years, otherwise I see the crash of a huge hype train and a lot of disappointed people.
Thanks for the link!A clinical trial is going on at the moment with 400 participants, source:
Reversing Synchronized Brain Circuits With Targeted Auditory-Somatosensory Stimulation to Treat Phantom Percepts
IMHO, the small sample-size is one reason why I would not join those who already claimed matter-of-factly that this thing was already proven to work. This new trial should be much more definitive.Just looking at the ClinicalTrials site and noticed some differences in the current study vs the old one. Aside from the much higher participant numbers (400 vs 20), this round is testing 6 weeks of treatment vs 4 weeks previously and is testing both 30 and 60 minutes treatments vs just 30 minutes previously.
84 days till April.
As learned through Lenire, the most important factor is what constitutes "improvement". If it's barely "statistically significant" then it's little better than placebo.60% of people improving doesn't seem too promising to me. I thought almost everyone had their tinnitus reduced in half... I read that on here before.
While you're not entirely wrong; we don't have any other options right now so barely statistically significant is better than nothing.As learned through Lenire, the most important factor is what constitutes "improvement". If it's barely "statistically significant" then it's little better than placebo.
And with Lenire the lack of a control makes the whole question of change beyond placebo impossible to discern.As learned through Lenire, the most important factor is what constitutes "improvement". If it's barely "statistically significant" then it's little better than placebo.
Neuromod have stated that 86% of participants who undertook the treatment in their trial saw an improvement. This stat only has meaning if all the participants in this 86% had a significant difference from a control that was above the MCID for the scale they used (which they didn't) and there was a control (which there wasn't!, or at least there wasn't an arm which they stated was a control in advance).As learned through Lenire, the most important factor is what constitutes "improvement". If it's barely "statistically significant" then it's little better than placebo.
Whether this is available in 2022 or not is something we don't know yet, but it is the only treatment I know that is this promising that even has a chance of becoming available in 2022.So after crisscrossing the research threads I have to ask some of the senior folks who know better than me, is Dr. Shore's device the only device we have with the potential for release and treatment in 2022?
@AfroSnowman, @OptimusPrimed, @DebInAustralia, @linearb, @GlennS, @Lukee.
Final Study completion date moved forward from June to April.Just FYI, the recruitment for the Phase II trial is now closed (and has been for a while, seems like), which means they're evaluating their last round of participants. Data on the 400-participant trial should be out in the next 3 - 6 months, which will be far more useful for evaluation than the 20-participant Phase I trial. Just hang tight for the real data before jumping to any conclusions about its efficacy.