Low-pitch treatment alleviates ringing sound of
tinnitus
Editor: We've long been telling tinnitus sufferers that there's
really no cure, but some behavioral changes might alleviate some of the
symptoms of tinnitus. Now researchers at the University of California at
Irvine may have added another weapon to that arsenal!
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
UCI researchers find novel approach for hearing therapy
For those who pumped up the volume one too many times, UC Irvine
researchers may have found a treatment for the hearing damage loud music
can cause.
Fan-Gang Zeng and colleagues have identified an effective way to
treat the symptoms of tinnitus, a form of hearing damage typically
marked by high-pitched ringing that torments more than 60 million
Americans. A low-pitched sound, the researchers discovered, applied by a
simple MP3 player suppressed and provided temporary relief from the
high-pitch ringing tone associated with the disorder.
Tinnitus is caused by injury, infection or the repeated bombast of
loud sound, and can appear in one or both ears. It's no coincidence that
many rock musicians, and their fans, suffer from it. Although known for
its high-pitched ringing, tinnitus is an internal noise that varies in
its pitch and frequency. Some treatments exist, but none are
consistently effective.
Zeng presented his study Feb. 13 at the Middle Winter Research
Conference for Otolaryngology in Denver.
"Tinnitus is one of the most common hearing disorders in the
world, but very little is understood about why it occurs or how to treat
it," said Zeng, a professor of otolaryngology, biomedical
engineering, cognitive sciences, and anatomy and neurobiology. "We
are very pleased and surprised by the success of this therapy, and
hopefully with further testing it will provide needed relief to the
millions who suffer from tinnitus."
As director of the speech and hearing lab at UCI, Zeng and his team
made their discovery while addressing the severe tinnitus of a research
subject. The patient uses a cochlear implant to address a constant
mid-ranged pitched sound in his injured right ear accented by the
periodic piercing of a high-pitched ringing sound ranging between 4,000
and 8,000 hertz in frequency.
At first, Zeng thought of treating the tinnitus with a high-pitched
sound, a method called masking that is sometimes used in tinnitus
therapy attempts. But he ruled out that option because of the severity
of the patient's tinnitus, so an opposite approach was explored, which
provided unexpectedly effective results.
After making many adjustments, the researchers created a low-pitched,
pulsing sound - described as a "calming, pleasant tone" of 40
to 100 hertz of frequency - which, when applied to the patient through a
regular MP3 player, suppressed the high-pitched ringing after about 90
seconds and provided what the patient described as a high-level of
continued relief.
Zeng's patient programs the low-pitched sound through his cochlear
implant, and Zeng is currently studying how to apply this treatment for
people who do not use any hearing-aid devices. Since a cochlear implant
replaces the damaged mechanism in the ear that stimulates the auditory
nerve, Zeng believes that a properly pitched acoustic sound will have
the same effect on tinnitus for someone who does not use a hearing
device. Dr. Hamid Djalilian, a UCI physician who treats hearing
disorders, points out that a custom sound can be created for the
patients, who then can download it into their personal MP3 player and
use it when they need relief.
"The treatment, though, does not represent a cure," Zeng
said. "This low-pitch therapeutic approach is only effective while
being applied to the ear, after which the ringing can return. But it
underscores the need to customize stimulation for tinnitus suppression
and suggests that balanced stimulation, rather than masking, is the
brain mechanism underlying this surprising finding."
Qing Tang, Jeff Carroll, Andrew Dimitrijevic and Dr. Arnold Starr of
UCI; Leonid Litvak of Advanced Bionics Corp.; and Jannine Larkin and Dr.
Nikolas H. Blevins at Stanford University participated in the study,
which was supported by the National Institutes of Health.
About the University of California, Irvine: The University of
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undergraduate and graduate students and about 1,800 faculty members. The
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www.today.uci.edu.