I found this article on ringing in your ears and a possible treatment. Here is the link http://dailygleaner.canadaeast.com/opinion/article/1372206 and article. After 8 years in the Armd. Corps I now have some hope to stop the ringing. If this is the wrong spot to place this, or if it has been posted already I do apologize.
Soldiers who deal daily with a constant ringing in their ears received some promising news last week with regard to a possible treatment and cure of the disorder.
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Cpl Bill Gomm/Canadian Forces
As Sergeant Lejla Imamovic makes sure her earplugs are in place, Gunner Chris Ferguson pulls the lanyard on the C3 105mm Howitzer. Sgt. Imamovic and Gnr. Ferguson are with 10 Field Artillery Regiment. This training exercise took place in Shilo, Manitoba last March. Because of their work proximity to such loud equipment, many soldiers suffer from tinnitus, a constant ringing in the ears.
In an online edition of Nature, the international journal of science, researchers from the University of Texas at Dallas reported that targeted nerve stimulation could yield a long-term reversal of what is called tinnitus.
Tinnitus is defined as the perception of noises in the ear which correspond to no acoustic signal in the environment.
Military personnel are regularly exposed to loud and sharp noises connected to artillery firing, bombs, mortars, as well as the whining of large engines from airplanes and other equipment.
In a news release issued by the university, researchers Dr. Michael Kilgard, Dr. Navzer Engineer and university-affiliated biotechnology firm MicroTransponder reported that stimulation of the vagus nerve paired with sounds eliminated tinnitus in rats. The nerve is responsible for carrying a wide assortment of signals to and from the brain.
Vagus nerve stimulation (VNS) is currently used in humans for the treatment of epilepsy and depression.
Although statistics related to tinnitus in this country's military are unclear, it's said to be the top service-connected disability of U.S. veterans returning from Iraq and Afghanistan.
According to a UT at Dallas news release, the U.S. Veterans Administration spends about $1 billion a year on disability payments for tinnitus.
The Tinnitus Association of Canada estimates there are approximately 360,000 people with the condition in Canada, while the Tinnitus Association in the U.S. said the disorder affects up to 50 million Americans.
"Brain changes in response to nerve damage or cochlear trauma cause irregular neural activity believed to be responsible for many types of chronic pain and tinnitus," Dr. Kilgard, associate professor in the School of Behavioral and Brain Sciences at UT Dallas and co-author of the journal article, said in the release.
"Brain changes in response to nerve damage or cochlear trauma cause irregular neural activity believed to be responsible for many types of chronic pain and tinnitus. But when we paired tones with brief pulses of vagus nerve stimulation, we eliminated the physiological and behavioral symptoms of tinnitus in noise-exposed rats."
According to the article, researchers are involved in retraining the brain to ignore the nerve signals that simulate ringing.
With regard to the rats, those involved in the work monitored the laboratory rodents for several weeks after therapy, and the improvements persisted.
"This minimally invasive method of generating neural plasticity allows us to precisely manipulate brain circuits, which cannot be achieved with drugs," said Dr. Engineer, vice president of pre-clinical affairs at MicroTransponder and lead author on the study, said in the release. "Pairing sounds with VNS provides that precision by rewiring damaged circuits and reversing the abnormal activity that generates the phantom sound."
The good news is that the research team is developing parameters for a clinical trial in humans.
The article's authors said the translation from basic science to the clinic has been quite rapid and expressed enthusiasm over the fact that the National Institutes for Health in the U.S. has been supportive of the group's efforts to move this work along faster, in hopes of providing effective treatments to tinnitus patients.
The National Institutes of Health (NIH) early in 2010 granted Dr. Kilgard and MicroTransponder $1.7 million to further investigate whether nerve stimulation offers a long-term cure for tinnitus.
The first patient could be treated in Europe by early 2011.
"The initial set of human participants will have the electrodes attached to the left vagus nerve in their neck during a short outpatient procedure. They will come to the clinic Monday through Friday for a few weeks of treatment. At each daily session, they will experience VNS paired with sounds," further noted the UT Dallas news release.
The research article, which will be published in its entirety later this month is, undoubtedly, good news for soldiers and others suffering from tinnitus.
Only time will tell if it's the cure-all people have been waiting for,
Michael Staples covers the military for The Daily Gleaner. He can be reached at staples.michael@dailygleaner.com.
Soldiers who deal daily with a constant ringing in their ears received some promising news last week with regard to a possible treatment and cure of the disorder.
Enlarge Photo
Click to Enlarge
Click to Enlarge
Cpl Bill Gomm/Canadian Forces
As Sergeant Lejla Imamovic makes sure her earplugs are in place, Gunner Chris Ferguson pulls the lanyard on the C3 105mm Howitzer. Sgt. Imamovic and Gnr. Ferguson are with 10 Field Artillery Regiment. This training exercise took place in Shilo, Manitoba last March. Because of their work proximity to such loud equipment, many soldiers suffer from tinnitus, a constant ringing in the ears.
In an online edition of Nature, the international journal of science, researchers from the University of Texas at Dallas reported that targeted nerve stimulation could yield a long-term reversal of what is called tinnitus.
Tinnitus is defined as the perception of noises in the ear which correspond to no acoustic signal in the environment.
Military personnel are regularly exposed to loud and sharp noises connected to artillery firing, bombs, mortars, as well as the whining of large engines from airplanes and other equipment.
In a news release issued by the university, researchers Dr. Michael Kilgard, Dr. Navzer Engineer and university-affiliated biotechnology firm MicroTransponder reported that stimulation of the vagus nerve paired with sounds eliminated tinnitus in rats. The nerve is responsible for carrying a wide assortment of signals to and from the brain.
Vagus nerve stimulation (VNS) is currently used in humans for the treatment of epilepsy and depression.
Although statistics related to tinnitus in this country's military are unclear, it's said to be the top service-connected disability of U.S. veterans returning from Iraq and Afghanistan.
According to a UT at Dallas news release, the U.S. Veterans Administration spends about $1 billion a year on disability payments for tinnitus.
The Tinnitus Association of Canada estimates there are approximately 360,000 people with the condition in Canada, while the Tinnitus Association in the U.S. said the disorder affects up to 50 million Americans.
"Brain changes in response to nerve damage or cochlear trauma cause irregular neural activity believed to be responsible for many types of chronic pain and tinnitus," Dr. Kilgard, associate professor in the School of Behavioral and Brain Sciences at UT Dallas and co-author of the journal article, said in the release.
"Brain changes in response to nerve damage or cochlear trauma cause irregular neural activity believed to be responsible for many types of chronic pain and tinnitus. But when we paired tones with brief pulses of vagus nerve stimulation, we eliminated the physiological and behavioral symptoms of tinnitus in noise-exposed rats."
According to the article, researchers are involved in retraining the brain to ignore the nerve signals that simulate ringing.
With regard to the rats, those involved in the work monitored the laboratory rodents for several weeks after therapy, and the improvements persisted.
"This minimally invasive method of generating neural plasticity allows us to precisely manipulate brain circuits, which cannot be achieved with drugs," said Dr. Engineer, vice president of pre-clinical affairs at MicroTransponder and lead author on the study, said in the release. "Pairing sounds with VNS provides that precision by rewiring damaged circuits and reversing the abnormal activity that generates the phantom sound."
The good news is that the research team is developing parameters for a clinical trial in humans.
The article's authors said the translation from basic science to the clinic has been quite rapid and expressed enthusiasm over the fact that the National Institutes for Health in the U.S. has been supportive of the group's efforts to move this work along faster, in hopes of providing effective treatments to tinnitus patients.
The National Institutes of Health (NIH) early in 2010 granted Dr. Kilgard and MicroTransponder $1.7 million to further investigate whether nerve stimulation offers a long-term cure for tinnitus.
The first patient could be treated in Europe by early 2011.
"The initial set of human participants will have the electrodes attached to the left vagus nerve in their neck during a short outpatient procedure. They will come to the clinic Monday through Friday for a few weeks of treatment. At each daily session, they will experience VNS paired with sounds," further noted the UT Dallas news release.
The research article, which will be published in its entirety later this month is, undoubtedly, good news for soldiers and others suffering from tinnitus.
Only time will tell if it's the cure-all people have been waiting for,
Michael Staples covers the military for The Daily Gleaner. He can be reached at staples.michael@dailygleaner.com.