Doesn't look real. But to help Tinnitus, they do need to look more at the brain like this idea does. In many cases such as acoustic neuromas correcting the underlying cause does not stop the tinnitus because the Neuroplasticity change has already occurred in the brain.
In many cases such as acoustic neuromas correcting the underlying cause does not stop the tinnitus because the Neuroplasticity change has already occurred in the brain.
Well I don't know enough about brain chemistry to say yes or no, but Neuroplasticity is often supported by the science community; Tinnitus is a tough beast to understand though.
We are talking about a focus on the brain as the tinnitus issue as opposed to the ear. What do you not understand? If so many people have hearing loss (ear issue) but no tinnitus then it must be closely correlated to the brain, not just the ear.
But they're different areas of the brain: neuroplasticity happens all the time in our daily lives. The maladaptive neuroplasticity that is believed to be responsible for Tinnitus happens in the auditory cortex, not in the memory and cognitive areas. The reason we want to stimulate the latter 2 is because they get neglected when patients have hearing loss due to the isolation it creates. The memory and cognitive areas are not responsible for T (as far as the literature I've read).
We are talking about a focus on the brain as the tinnitus issue as opposed to the ear. What do you not understand? If so many people have hearing loss (ear issue) but no tinnitus then it must be closely correlated to the brain, not just the ear.
Not necessarily. Absence of evidence isn't evidence of absence. It could be that some type of hearing loss creates a condition in the ear that creates tinnitus, while others don't. Nobody knows today for sure. What we do know is that in some cases T is generated downstream from the hearing nerve, since cutting it does not resolve Tinnitus. But just because some cases are that way does not mean all cases are that way.