Who is this other patient you are referencing? Is someone else doing the same treatment?Our other patient is doing treatment no. 20 tomorrow. I think we will get more info once finished, which will probably be pretty soon. I hear @BrysonKingMe will be doing no. 7. Fingers crossed!
@scotty03874 - it's the same person I have reported on a little earlier in the thread. You might remember that in my correspondence with the clinic, I was told that 2 US patients had flown out to S. Korea for the treatment. One of those patients agreed to speak to me about their ongoing treatment. That person has been out there a couple of months and is coming to the end of their treatment.Who is this other patient you are referencing? Is someone else doing the same treatment?
Much respect for sticking with it. You are helping us all out in a massive way.Hey @Ben Johnson, my next update will be when I am finished with the treatment in about 2.5 weeks.
Wishing you all the best and hoping for a good outcome from your treatmentsHey @Ben Johnson, my next update will be when I am finished with the treatment in about 2.5 weeks.
Search for my posts in the Pulsatile Tinnitus category and you will find lots of information on my MEM experience.What do you guys think about this being good for middle ear myoclonus issues? I have involuntarily rumbling of middle ear muscles from sounds, some internal sound autophony (not SCDS), TMJ nerve pain, single-sided facial nerve twitches around my ear and temple, and ear fullness. It's as if the nerves trigger too easily to sound and somatic input. Somehow I hear my neck grating, intermittent pulse, sometimes even rumbling when I blink and swallow.
Personally, this is more debilitating than my bilateral tinnitus so would love to get rid of at least this.
Thumbs up Bryson!!! You the manmy next update will be when I am finished with the treatment in about 2.5 weeks.
Dr. Heon Man Sirh wrote to @Uklawyer:Out of curiosity, do you all think this treatment would be effective for those of us with diabetes (who have our diabetes under control)? There was a mention of diabetes by the doctor I believe, but I can't seem to find it now.
This doesn't necessarily mean it wouldn't help but it's less likely to work.And severe hearing loss (who need hearing aids), heavy alcohol consumption, chronic heart and kidney diseases, diabetes and long tinnitus duration are poor prognostic factors.
Only if it works well!So peer-group influence being what it is, will we all be heading off to South Korea this summer?
I would hope that those that are the most debilitated could go right away but the most practical thing would be if the South Korean doctors would share their method with doctors around the world.Just a word of caution to the rest of us. I wish @BrysonKingMe every success... but echoes back to student days brought a study to mind about peer-group effect. These marketing people found that one of the strongest ways for some innovation to get established in a target population is the behaviour of the peers. I can't recall the exact product. Something for doctors in their medical practices... let's for example say stethoscopes. Well, at first all the sales people got was polite acknowledgements from the doctors. Only when one or two of them started using them, then they all started using them.
So peer-group influence being what it is, will we all be heading off to South Korea this summer?
Well if this is inevitable, then would somebody please keep statistics on the tinnitus success scores, failure scores and so-so scores.
Yeah, I'll likely be going to Korea for this treatment next year if we get a few positive accounts. Now that my hyperacusis is improving, my tinnitus is really starting to bug me. Funny how that works...This looks very promising. If it keeps showing the same success I might just go to Korea also
@chinup, can you elaborate? Did your tinnitus get worse after your hyperacusis improved, or are you just focusing on it more now because the hyperacusis is no longer as bad? Sometimes, tinnitus improves once hyperacusis does - tinnitus becomes more stable or quiet. I've had that happen before in the past.Now that my hyperacusis is improving, my tinnitus is really starting to bug me. Funny how that works...
You should really read the thread, or better read the peer reviewed study linked in the first post. There is no nerve regeneration here. This is not OTO-413. This is based on alternating _stimulation_ and nerve blocks as a way to reset nerve signals and lower tinnitus. Nerve blocks alone based on Lidocaine have indeed been attempted in the past but the effect is temporary. Here they added the stimulation. Key difference here with the South Korean thread you mentioned is that there is a peer reviewed study, published in a medical journal, highlighting the treatment efficacy, cemented by some initial anecdotes of forum members. The major blame the other clinic had received was their unwillingness to expose their method by publishing results. Not the situation here. Then, whether the study suffers from selection bias is an open discussion, but you can't compare this with the PRP treatment John Adams and a few others underwent.I apologize for not reading the entire thread but I can't help but feel a sense of dejavu with the South Korean plasma injection therapy that one prominent member was evangelizing for a while. There seems to be a cottage industry of treatments available in South Korea due to what looks like a very loose regulatory regime over there.
The efficacy of Lidocaine as a very temporary relief is well known but the ad copy that nerves regenerate is implausible.
How long did it take your hyperacusis to improve?Yeah, I'll likely be going to Korea for this treatment next year if we get a few positive accounts. Now that my hyperacusis is improving, my tinnitus is really starting to bug me. Funny how that works...
Just focusing on it more. Also seems to be temporarily spiking the past few days but hopefully it will calm down soon. I have a ton of tones but they are usually not too loud. Sometimes they get reactive and it's like a swarm of electric insects in my head.@chinup, can you elaborate? Did your tinnitus get worse after your hyperacusis improved, or are you just focusing on it more now because the hyperacusis is no longer as bad? Sometimes, tinnitus improves once hyperacusis does - tinnitus becomes more stable or quiet. I've had that happen before in the past.
It's been a rollercoaster. I keep improving then having major setbacks. Improvement takes about 7-8 months each time. Fortunately I've found some trends that were causing the setbacks and have cut those out of my life. I've also been taking a ton of ginger supplements and eating + drinking ginger foods and drinks. For some reason that seriously improves my noxacusis.How long did it take your hyperacusis to improve?
I spoke to the doctor at the clinic. She said they would be open to sharing their technique with international doctors.I would hope that those that are the most debilitated could go right away but the most practical thing would be if the South Korean doctors would share their method with doctors around the world.
The procedure doesn't sound too complicated from a medical standpoint so maybe it could be taught rather easily.
To me, high rates of success will give many of us the hope that we need to persevere even if we do have to wait awhile to be treated.