This study?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.
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.
Wow!! Please do let us know how you are getting along with thanks from all of us!!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.
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.
Question for all of you. If you were offered this treatment would you have turned it down?
Question for all of you. If you were offered this treatment would you have turned it down?
Mr. Cartman, Please fill me in on what Susan Shore is saying. Would appreciate it. Thanks.
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.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?
How involved was the surgery for the implant?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.
Wishing you all the best and hope you get the actual treatment from the beginning and get a positive resultBut one thing is for sure I will get the actual treatment at the 6 week mark. Very involved study
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.How involved was the surgery for the implant?
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.
Thanks @labrat10687 you are very brave person to try this out. I'm glad the implant process wasn't painful. Is this study taking place in USA ?
@labrat10687 can the vagus nerve be damaged from the coil? and can the implant be removed without harming the nerve....?
@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?
What happens when the battery goes dead? Does it set off detectors at airports? If it doesnt work can they remove it? It seems somewhat invasive to me.
less invasive method when this gets released, if they manage