I spoke to Professor De Ridder about this on the 1st of August. It is on hold until he returns to Europe from New Zealand. I don't know when that is.Can someone who speaks Dutch contact TU Delft asking for an update?
Hi Padraigh!I spoke to Professor De Ridder about this on the 1st of August. It is on hold until he returns to Europe from New Zealand. I don't know when that is.
To be completely honest, he really kind of brushed off the question a little and was very casual about it.Hi Padraigh!
Thank you for the information. On hold... mhhhh ok, I hope it is not cancelled. They try to target the DCN via vagus nerve stimulation. I hope it's based on some former data and is not like a first experiment.
Don't forget this is a Master's thesis written by a student. Not the work of a respected Professor, not an entire scientific lab dedicated to the human hearing organ. It is not a scientific or published paper. I didn't read the entire paper, actually stopped when I saw thesis for graduation.To be completely honest, he really kind of brushed off the question a little and was very casual about it.
The document itself is excellent reading and they are strangely enough running a Lenire TENT-3A trial in Bra3in at the moment.
I find it confusing that Lenire would allow this if Prof. De Ridder was an active competitor with this TU Delft Device.
To be honest, in general I find Prof. De Ridder a nice guy, who doesn't want to discuss research that much in his 'clinics'.
It was all I wanted to talk about as the various drug cocktails that have worked for some of his patients don't appeal to me.
A four drug cocktail of very low doses of various drugs has given 20% of patients a reduction. Some a 50% reduction but again nothing in a clinical trial or a paper so not touching it.
That is the issue with Prof. De Ridder. Lots of theories and ideas plus detailed papers but nothing tangible in a clinical trial environment yet.
We shall wait to see what Dr. Shore produces in her 100 patient trial. Fair dues to her for actually getting the trial done.
This is why we don't get anywhere. Seriously how on earth aren't our military and government picking this up.
I don't think Bill Gates could care any less about a 'champagne problem' like tinnitus.We need someone to make friends with Gates, Bezos, Musk, or some other billionaire.
Another "Michigan" device?Update:
Squeaking, humming, buzzing. The discomfort of tinnitus
What did you find out from the survey?
"It has pointed us towards solutions which would make sense for users. For instance, we are currently working on a small device that can stimulate the vagus nerve through pulses of electricity through the skin."
Should I think of an electrical stimulation that reduces tinnitus?
"Yes, that's right. We had one graduate student work on that and we will put a second one to work on it. We expect to test the effectiveness within a few months at BRAI3N clinic in Ghent, Belgium. The remedy is a combination of the electrical stimulation of a nerve and acoustic stimulation. It turns out, and there have been scientific studies on this, that if you give multimodal stimulation such as electric and acoustic signals at the same time, it increases the learning capacity of the brain. We want to teach the brain how to reconfigure itself. The brains of patients have organised themselves in a way that produces tinnitus, so we want to instruct them to start organising themselves differently. Not the whole brain, just the auditory cortex. Hence the combination of sound stimulation and electrical stimulation."
What does that look like in practice?
"For now, this is still done with headphones and a sticker with electrodes. This allows us to test 20 patients in Ghent without any problem. But if you can reduce the equipment to an earpiece, there will be manufacturers of portable audio devices that will be very interested in it."
I watched that live. He talked about combination treatments being better than unipolar. That seemed the main theme. Other than that, he seemed to be implying there is too much distance between research and the clinic.New online lecture featuring Dr. De Ridder. He talks about the evolution of research & (future) interventions for the treatment of tinnitus. The most interesting part about a future intervention starts at 08:36, when he talks about a certain approach that he want to apply at his Brai3n clinic.
Any recent news about this study?
I've sent Professor Serdijn an email yesterday about the current status of the TU Delft device. Hopefully we'll hear from him soon enough.I want to know where this treatment currently stands. I trust Dr. Ridder, so I'm very interested in knowing what we can do to help. He's a smart guy.
Thank you so much for sharing @Christiaan. I am sorry if my question comes off rhetorical or weird, but just trying to understand what he is saying as far as testing in a clinical setting. Do you think this means having it trialed at Brai3n clinic with patients to see how it goes, or setting up a formal clinical trial with the device?Hi everyone,
I tried contacting Prof. Serdijn / Brai3n clinic about the current status, but I haven't received a reply so far.
However, I did discover a podcast (Universiteit van Nederland/ University of the Netherlands) in which Prof. Serdijn talks about tinnitus and why he is working with a team at TU Delft to develop a bi-modal device for tinnitus. This session has been recently recorded.
For Dutch speakers, you can listen to the podcast here.
I also made a summary for non-Dutch speakers.
Summary
Prof. Serdijn has a mild form of tinnitus. He can't accept the situation that patients get to hear from an ENT that there's no solution for tinnitus. Therefore, Prof. Serdijn aims to make a contribution as an electronic-technological engineer by co-creating a device that effectively treats tinnitus.
In the podcast, he briefly discusses the various causes of tinnitus, how it manifests in the brain, and the potential of electronic neuromodulation in reducing its severity.
The most intriguing part is at the end of the podcast, where he mentions he's developing a bi-modal electronic device for tinnitus and hopes it will soon be tested in a clinical setting.
Thanks for this. The past couple of years I've been working and re-working a layman's model about what I believe tinnitus might be. Many of the terms we hear along the way have informed that thought process but the main one I keep returning to is, voltage gating.Prof. Serdijn aims to make a contribution as an electronic-technological engineer
One thing I have noticed about Dr. Dirk De Ridder is there seems to be no long drawn-out process in getting devices in clinical trials quickly established in his clinic. No talk of approval process or anything. Look at the myriad of electrical and magnetic stimulation devices he has in his clinic.Do you think this means having it trialed at Brai3n Clinic with patients to see how it goes, or setting up a formal clinical trial with the device
No, it's a good question: in this podcast, Prof. Serdijn says that he wants to test it in a tinnitus clinic. Since we don't have a tinnitus clinic in the Netherlands where they have a know-how for applying electronic neuromodulation, it seems, to me at least, highly likely that he's talking about the Brai3n clinic. It's still an assumption, but I think this is the most likely scenario since Prof. Serdijn has had talks with Dr. De Ridder and his team last September about the workings of the TU Delft device.Thank you so much for sharing @Christiaan. I am sorry if my question comes off rhetorical or weird, but just trying to understand what he is saying as far as testing in a clinical setting. Do you think this means having it trialed at Brai3n clinic with patients to see how it goes, or setting up a formal clinical trial with the device?
It never hurts to contact Prof. Serdijn via email. You can find his contact details on this site.Thanks for this. The past couple of years I've been working and re-working a layman's model about what I believe tinnitus might be. Many of the terms we hear along the way have informed that thought process but the main one I keep returning to is, voltage gating.
Although I still need to make a final post about all this, I've often felt it'd be really interesting to eventually get feedback from someone within the tinnitus sphere who is actually an electronic-technological engineer. Maybe Prof. Serdijn could be that person.
I may be to blame for the miscommunication about the clinical trial stage. I apologise for the confusion. I posted about my mistake in this thread.One thing I have noticed about Dr. Dirk De Ridder is there seems to be no long drawn-out process in getting devices in clinical trials quickly established in his clinic. No talk of approval process or anything. Look at the myriad of electrical and magnetic stimulation devices he has in his clinic.
I actually thought TU Delft was already in the clinical trial stage at Brai3n. I would expect to see that device in his clinic in 12-18 months if it is successful in the clinical trial.
As someone in the UK, I have put the Michigan device on the backburner to 2026-2028. When Dr. Shore said they are not pursuing CE approval until it is established in the USA, I switched off. My only interest will be seeing how American folk get on with it.