A new sound therapy called Otoharmonics is being introduced in the U.S. The company is located in Portland, Oregon, but, I believe also has its origin in Uruguay. The therapy utilizes an iPod and an ear piece. An audiologist matches your tinnitus tone, inputs it into an iPod, and you listen to that tone every night while you sleep.
In 2010, the International Tinnitus Journal (ITJ) published a pilot study that I believe was the basis for the Otoharmonics device. The article may be accessed by clicking here.
Here is the abstract from the study:
A new strategy for idiopathic subjective tinnitus treatment - sound stimulation during sleep - has been applied. It was based on the knowledgement that the auditory system also works during sleep, processing the incoming information. Eleven patients were stimulated every night during 6 months. The stimulus was a sound that mimetized the tinnitus and was fixed at the same tinnitus intensity, applied through an iPod. All patients decreased their tinnitus intensity in the first month of treatment (statistically significant), most of them in the first week. Tinnitus intensity continued decreasing in the following weeks; three patients presented periods of total silence.
This is the link to the company's webpage: http://otoharmonics.com/home
A 2012, YouTube video exists that explains the technology. I'm presuming the video is from a CNN channel in Uruguay.
Finally, Otoharmonics is a corporate sponsor of the ATA. Here is their description:
The team at Otoharmonics – a group of world-class scientists, clinicians, business professionals and patients – has developed a new home therapy system to enable a comfortable and personalized method for managing tinnitus. Understanding that no two people are alike, our team harnessed advanced discoveries in neuroscience to develop a therapy that is uniquely tailored to the patient. No more one size fits all solutions. No more trying to drown out tinnitus with ambient noise. With a personal approach and a deep understanding of the impact tinnitus can have, the Levo System by Otoharmonics is designed to be user friendly and capable of delivering custom sound therapy that is based on the specific needs of each person.
In 2010, the International Tinnitus Journal (ITJ) published a pilot study that I believe was the basis for the Otoharmonics device. The article may be accessed by clicking here.
Here is the abstract from the study:
A new strategy for idiopathic subjective tinnitus treatment - sound stimulation during sleep - has been applied. It was based on the knowledgement that the auditory system also works during sleep, processing the incoming information. Eleven patients were stimulated every night during 6 months. The stimulus was a sound that mimetized the tinnitus and was fixed at the same tinnitus intensity, applied through an iPod. All patients decreased their tinnitus intensity in the first month of treatment (statistically significant), most of them in the first week. Tinnitus intensity continued decreasing in the following weeks; three patients presented periods of total silence.
A 2012, YouTube video exists that explains the technology. I'm presuming the video is from a CNN channel in Uruguay.
Finally, Otoharmonics is a corporate sponsor of the ATA. Here is their description:
The team at Otoharmonics – a group of world-class scientists, clinicians, business professionals and patients – has developed a new home therapy system to enable a comfortable and personalized method for managing tinnitus. Understanding that no two people are alike, our team harnessed advanced discoveries in neuroscience to develop a therapy that is uniquely tailored to the patient. No more one size fits all solutions. No more trying to drown out tinnitus with ambient noise. With a personal approach and a deep understanding of the impact tinnitus can have, the Levo System by Otoharmonics is designed to be user friendly and capable of delivering custom sound therapy that is based on the specific needs of each person.