Chemical Combo May Prevent Hearing Loss
Editor: We've seen several companies report that certain drugs and
chemicals are effective in preventing noise-induced hearing loss. Here's
another promising candidate from of the Oklahoma Medical Research
Foundation, the Hough Ear Institute, and INTEGRIS Health.
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June 2008
In today's military, soldiers can be hurt by more than just bullets,
and one very sensitive area has been under constant attack-the ears. Even
with external hearing protection, the sounds of warfare can damage the
sensitive inner ear, or cochlea, and severely reduce hearing.
But a new drug combination, developed through a collaboration of the
Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation and the Hough Ear along with support
from INTEGRIS Health, has shown promise in reducing hearing loss. The
treatment could have both military and civilian applications.
OMRF's Robert Floyd, Ph.D., working with Hough CEO and retired Army ear
surgeon Richard Kopke, M.D., found that a combination of two
compounds-4-OHPBN nitrone and the drug n-acetyl-cysteine-could stop damage
to the inner ear caused by acute acoustic trauma.
"This is a very exciting finding," said Floyd, who holds the Merrick
Foundation Chair in Aging Research at OMRF. "The research is still at a
pre-clinical stage, but we're hopeful that we soon can begin testing in
humans."
According to a 2003 study by the Institute of Medicine, "Noise and
Military Service: Implications for Hearing Loss and Tinnitus," hearing
loss is the second most common type of disability among veterans,
accounting for more than 75,000 cases of disability. "Hearing loss costs
the U.S. Department of Defense about $1 billion a year," Kopke said. "It's
the most common injury for which people are evacuated from a war zone.
I've known some 30-year-olds who come out of the service with the hearing
of a 70-year-old."
If medics are equipped with the drug combination, he said, they could
administer it in the field, immediately after an explosion or other combat
situation causes noise damage.
Without the medication, prolonged exposure to loud noise can damage and
kill hair cells that register sound, causing hearing loss. But in
laboratory animals, the hearing loss was almost completely prevented if
the drug combination was given within four hours of exposure to noise
levels that would otherwise cause acoustic trauma. Significant decreases
were also seen if the combination was administration within 24 hours of
exposure.
Current tests are being performed on chinchillas because their hearing
range is similar to humans. Electric impulses in the brain are measured to
gauge how well the animals hear after taking the drugs.
"If this therapy ultimately proves effective," said Floyd, "it could
also have many civilian applications, including combating age-related
hearing loss." According to a National Health Interview Survey Core, 1 in
3 Americans over the age of 70 reported that they had trouble hearing. And
the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health reports that
approximately 30 million Americans are exposed to hazardous noise levels
on the job.
The discovery is the product of a four-year collaboration between Floyd
and Kopke, whose work was funded by the U.S. Department of Defense Office
of Naval Research.