Great to have some people on board such as yourself and HootOwl who understand all of this.
I wouldn't know a ribbon synaptopathy if it jumped up and bit me.
One small question. I recall reading way back that some patients suffer from hearing loss. Some suffer from tinnitus. Some suffer from hyperaccusis. Some suffer from one of these but not the other two. Some suffer from two of these but not the other one. And lastly some suffer from all three.
Can this be explained in terms of hair-cell, stereocilia, OHC, IHC damage... i.e. inner ear damage?
It's great to see so much movement on the research and clinical trial side of things. Some people on Wall Street must have scented something. The hearing aid business, the sign language side of things and the cochlear implant side together must have a world-wide turnover of Billions. An innovation here would be a big step forward for you, me and much of humanity but I think realistically that business that is one of the big drivers too.
Thinking outside the box here: is it possible to do a human cochlear transplant, say to a mouse? Probably a stupid question on my part. Betrays my low knowledge of medicine.