- May 7, 2015
- 1,050
- Tinnitus Since
- 29.09/2014
- Cause of Tinnitus
- Acoustic trauma using headphones
No. It was not a good question!That's a bit like asking why do some people experience temporary tinnitus and permanent tinnitus. Excellent question. I wish I knew the answer.
I was trying to act naively to make a point!(thanks though)
Listen, like you, I don´t know anything really. But I have done my research like most here.
I´m sure you have too, but you really kind of take to the negative and hide behind being a realist, like I´ve said before. And you seem to have no problems making bold statements about your views either.
You admit doing this because you hope someone will tell you different, and I can understand that.
There are many theories regarding acute vs. chronic tinnitus and if the brain are able to unlearn it, should the inner ear pathology be restored.
Acute vs. chronic: I think it comes down to the scope of the damage. I´ve experienced three really bad acoustic traumas in my life. The first two lingered for some month, then vanished. The third time it stayed and it is also much more severe/piercing, than the first two I experienced. I think the brain has the capacity to adapt and maybe also learn to use other resources from the cochlea(recruit adjacent healthy HC) to find some sort of balance. It could also be the brains natural filter-mechanisms (GABA) that can only stagger a certain degree of neuronal excitement over time. Maybe there is a significant difference between the two and that one will only respond to a drug within a certain timeframe. I read that a lot, so there is probably something to it. But when it comes to the synapses f.i. it's said they can be medically recovered for decades. Of course this would not help either if T is for life no matter what we will be able to repair.
When the damage is to severe for the brain to overlook and out of options, T will sustain, and ironically this is also a result of the brain seeking balance.
Can it be unlearned: T is a complex brain phenomenon, yes, but so is any kind of experiencing pain. When the issue responsible for the pain is fixed/healed, it goes away. Why would this not apply when repairing the inner ear?
Plasticity is not a one way street either. Its a term for the brains ability to change and adapt to its surrounding environment. Environment being our body. And memory? Surly it will remember how it was previous to damage then? And if not to say, the state of the brain with out damaged ears is probably its "preferred" state as well. Not having to compensate for anything. I choose to believe that, anyway.
I am a realist as well, as -well- informed- as- I -can-realist. Maybe with a little sugar on top.
The vexing thing for me is the time-consuming ordeal for science to play around with a compound before recognizing any benefits. Especially for drugs that is not even supposed to go in your bloodstream, but rather your cochlea fluids (talking about Frequency Therapeutics here). That is the killer for me!