Participant Experience: Vagus Nerve Stimulation (VNS) Paired With Tones for Tinnitus

Was approved for the VNS Study and had the implant surgery. Will keep you updated. If I can answer any questions please let me know. Thank You.

This is very exciting! Tell us, do you have tonal or noise tinnitus or both?

And what was the approval process like?

When will your therapy begin?
 
Yes Markku it is that study. I had the implant in the chest near my left arm. A wire from that is under my skin up to the left side(neck) vagus nerve. To be accepted you must go through a series of hearing and tinnitus tests. They try to pinpoint just exactly the loudness & pitch of your tinnitus.

Before you even reach this stage you must fill out many forms that will tell them what meds you are on and the history of your tinnitus. You have 2 appointments to do the tests and fill out many forms. At the end of the second appointment you are told if you have been accepted or not. Even if you have been accepted the choice is yours if you want to proceed.

You can opt out of the study at any time. This study is very involved and will take many months. I have an appointment in 2 weeks to get the laptop with the program where I will be listening to certain tones for 2 1/2 hrs a day. Right now thats all I know. This is day 3 after the surgery and no pain.
 
Question for all of you. If you were offered this treatment would you have turned it down?

Honestly, I would probably not have turned it down.. But thats because I think Susan Shore could be onto something.. It might be something to this dreaded nerve. Some researchers suspect it might play a role in Chronic fatigue syndrome as well..

I will watch this thread closely :)
 
Question for all of you. If you were offered this treatment would you have turned it down?

Same here I would have not turned it down especially that the initial trials in Belgium had some positive results

https://solentacoustics.wordpress.com/2014/07/31/experimental-tinnitus-treatment/

Half of the participants noted a large improvement, with 4 of them gaining a 26dB reduction in perceivable tinnitus loudness

26dB reduction would be amazing and that was achieved in a 20 day trial whilst the one your are currently doing is 6 weeks hence double the duration of the Initial trials, hence hopefully the results you would achieve should also be better

How do you rate your T out of a scale of 10 and is it low or high frequency and do you have any hearing loss?
 
Mr. Cartman, Please fill me in on what Susan Shore is saying. Would appreciate it. Thanks.

Its been a while since I read about her research, but from what I remember she and her research team found that people with somatic tinnitus had timing issues in their vagus nerve(s), and that stimulation of this nerve could learn the brain to cancel out the ringing, if they got the timing right. (at least from what I remember). You could probably look it up :)

The vagus nerve could be an important piece in the puzzle of some types (if not many) cases of somatic tinnitus, if she is right :)
 
Same here I would have not turned it down especially that the initial trials in Belgium had some positive results

https://solentacoustics.wordpress.com/2014/07/31/experimental-tinnitus-treatment/

Half of the participants noted a large improvement, with 4 of them gaining a 26dB reduction in perceivable tinnitus loudness

26dB reduction would be amazing and that was achieved in a 20 day trial whilst the one your are currently doing is 6 weeks hence double the duration of the Initial trials, hence hopefully the results you would achieve should also be better

How do you rate your T out of a scale of 10 and is it low or high frequency and do you have any hearing loss?
Mo Mo, Have had tinnitus for 15 years and like everyone else when it first started I was in a panic. Could mask it with basic white noise. Fast forward to 2006 and my tinnitus settled down to a point where I did not need to mask. For the next 3 years my tinnitus never changed and was easy to tolerate. In 2009 woke up one day to a much louder and very high pitched new sound. Back to the same old bs once again.

Since then my tinnitus has increased 4 times. The latest increase my tinnitus is very high pitched and is in both ears now when up until then is was only in one ear. I have very little hearing loss. I go in the 10th to activate the microtransponder that will stimulate the vagus nerve. For this study I have a 50/50 chance that I will be getting the actual treatment because this is a study. They need to do it this way to determine if the treatment works. I will do this for 6 weeks.

After that I will find out if I got the actual treatment or not. If not I will get the actual treatment. Remember this is a study and this is the best way to determine if the actual therapy will work. I will be given a laptop to listen to tones for 2 1/2 hours a day. But one thing is for sure I will get the actual treatment at the 6 week mark. Very involved study.
 
Yes Markku it is that study. I had the implant in the chest near my left arm. A wire from that is under my skin up to the left side(neck) vagus nerve. To be accepted you must go through a series of hearing and tinnitus tests. They try to pinpoint just exactly the loudness & pitch of your tinnitus.

Before you even reach this stage you must fill out many forms that will tell them what meds you are on and the history of your tinnitus. You have 2 appointments to do the tests and fill out many forms. At the end of the second appointment you are told if you have been accepted or not. Even if you have been accepted the choice is yours if you want to proceed.

You can opt out of the study at any time. This study is very involved and will take many months. I have an appointment in 2 weeks to get the laptop with the program where I will be listening to certain tones for 2 1/2 hrs a day. Right now thats all I know. This is day 3 after the surgery and no pain.
How involved was the surgery for the implant?
 
How involved was the surgery for the implant?
They implant a microtransponder that is about the size of a 9-volt battery on my left side of chest near my left arm. I don't feel a thing but make no mistake it's right underneath the skin and you can feel it. Simple solution(unlike tinnitus)is you just don't touch it. Then they attach a coil around the vagus nerve and connect the two with a small wire just under the skin. The pain,what little there was was gone in 2 days. It was an outpatient surgery. Found this on you tube.
 
I'm very happy to see participants in this study sharing their experiences here on Tinnitustalk. Not just the method in itself is interesting, but the whole concept of reprogrammning your brain. If it works out like this, there may be other and more effective ways.
 
I'm very happy to see participants in this study sharing their experiences here on Tinnitustalk. Not just the method in itself is interesting, but the whole concept of reprogrammning your brain. If it works out like this, there may be other and more effective ways.

One can only hope Vincent. Thats why when offered this I could not turn it down.
 
@labrat10687
are you in contact with any of the other trialees? Will you be able to know if any of them get relief from the treatment?
 
less invasive method when this gets released, if they manage :)

I guess the only way to simulate the vns is to directly tapping into the vns

mute button is supposed to do something similar and less invasive

Also other less invasive methods such as tms, tdcs, tens and trns but these don't simulate the vns they directly try to simulate the brain
 
Will make a list of your questions and get answers this Tuesday. I know after a period of time you only need to go in yearly for checkups. The following explains the surgery. An important thing to remember is that for the tinnitus treatment it onlys uses 1/100th of the electrical pulse needed for the epilepsy treatment. Have read where this type of surgery has been done over 60,000 times.


More info.


The device is surgically implanted under the skin on the chest. A wire is then threaded under the skin to connect the device to the vagus nerve, a large nerve that extends from the head and neck to the abdomen and commands voice (vocal cord movement) and involuntary body movements like as heart rate and food digestion.

Once the device is active, patients will undergo combined audio therapy. During therapy, patients wear headphones and listen to a series of single frequency tones, paired with stimulation, to encouraging neurons in the brain to change their connections and behavior. The 2.5-hour session will take place five days a week during the course of 4 weeks, initially in clinic and then at home.

To test the effectiveness of VNS to treat tinnitus, patients in the study will be randomly selected to take part in one of two groups:
• One group will get the VNS and tone test treatment immediately
• The other group will get the VNS, but "sham" therapy that is not expected to have a therapeutic benefit

After six weeks, both groups will receive active test treatment.

VNS is currently approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for use in the treatment of epilepsy and depression. More than 60,000 devices have been implanted in patients with epilepsy during the past 15 years.

Study participants
 

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