- Apr 14, 2016
- 4,604
- Tinnitus Since
- 03/2016
- Cause of Tinnitus
- Otosclerosis
Here is an interesting data point about people with an acoustic neuroma. This paper compares outcomes of Micro surgery and Gamma Knife. The former process cuts the auditory nerve (leading to deafness), while the latter to preserve it (as well as it can).
The results will be surprising to some:
So cutting the nerve resulted in a much higher improvement in tinnitus than those who had their nerve preserved.
We often hear/read that cutting the nerve will make your tinnitus worse, but things seem more complicated than that, as this study shows. It probably depends on where the genesis of the sound is in the "hearing pipeline", and clearly - as this study shows - it's not always in the brain.
Ref: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24339282
The results will be surprising to some:
In the TLM group (n=27), vestibulocochlear nerves were definitely cut. There was a higher rate of tinnitus improvement in TLM group (52%) than GKS group (16%, p=0.016). The GKS group had a significantly higher rate of tinnitus worsening (74%) than TLM group (11%, p<0.001). Mean scores of THI and VAS scores significantly decreased in the TLM group in contrast to significant increases in the GKS group. Tumor volume and preoperative hearing did not affect the changes in THI or VAS.
So cutting the nerve resulted in a much higher improvement in tinnitus than those who had their nerve preserved.
We often hear/read that cutting the nerve will make your tinnitus worse, but things seem more complicated than that, as this study shows. It probably depends on where the genesis of the sound is in the "hearing pipeline", and clearly - as this study shows - it's not always in the brain.
Ref: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24339282