- Sep 26, 2016
- 4
- Tinnitus Since
- February 2016
- Cause of Tinnitus
- Unkown
Can Immediate White Noise Therapy After Exposure to Damaging Loud Noise Prevent Tinnitus?
Excerpt from the article:
Research has shown that exposure to white noise – noise containing many frequencies, such as the roar of a crowd or the hum of an air conditioner – can freeze brain plasticity in young children and animals whose brains are still developing.
White noise could "also freeze the abnormal plasticity that occurs after hearing loss and may lead to tinnitus," (Karl) Kandler (director of the Auditory Research Group at the University of Pittsburgh) said.
He and his team found that mice that received white noise therapy immediately after being exposed to loud noises that would normally cause tinnitus did not develop symptoms.
"We think the reason why it works in our mouse model is because we started right afterwards," said Kandler. "Now we're trying to figure out how long after the damaging sound exposure can we start the white noise therapy to prevent it."
Four weeks after the noise trauma event is likely too late, he said, which is why most human tinnitus patients don't benefit from sound therapy.
He said one way to prevent the development of tinnitus after noise trauma is to expose oneself to moderate noise, white or otherwise.
(More info at article link above, including a link to Kandler's study.
Excerpt from the article:
Research has shown that exposure to white noise – noise containing many frequencies, such as the roar of a crowd or the hum of an air conditioner – can freeze brain plasticity in young children and animals whose brains are still developing.
White noise could "also freeze the abnormal plasticity that occurs after hearing loss and may lead to tinnitus," (Karl) Kandler (director of the Auditory Research Group at the University of Pittsburgh) said.
He and his team found that mice that received white noise therapy immediately after being exposed to loud noises that would normally cause tinnitus did not develop symptoms.
"We think the reason why it works in our mouse model is because we started right afterwards," said Kandler. "Now we're trying to figure out how long after the damaging sound exposure can we start the white noise therapy to prevent it."
Four weeks after the noise trauma event is likely too late, he said, which is why most human tinnitus patients don't benefit from sound therapy.
He said one way to prevent the development of tinnitus after noise trauma is to expose oneself to moderate noise, white or otherwise.
(More info at article link above, including a link to Kandler's study.