Remind me, do you have bilateral CIs now?
Neville no Iâm still Bimodal. Itâs been over 7 decades since my left ear hasnât heard much in the way of high frequencies. Hence why Iâm very hesitant to go Bilateral.
Ah, yeah I would have been very interested in your experience if you had chosen to go that way. Itâs not actually completely clear that unilateral auditory deprivation is the same as bilateral auditory deprivation. It might be. But the auditory system gets input from both sides very quicklyâitâs not completely out of the question that input from one side may keep things active enough to support the other side, at least paritally.
But if youâre still getting some richness from your hearing aid side, Iâd hesitate too. There are some nice benefits to being bimodal.
Neville my L ear is congenital, born 7 weeks prem, Iâve had profound loss all my life, never heard high frequencies in this ear. Would you still expect to get a reasonable result from a CI in this ear?
I will no doubt eventually have to go down this CI road again sometime in the future.
Hm. No, maybe not. I read an article a while back looking at outcomes for CI implantation in single-sided deafness (other ear normal hearing) of varying lengths. They had a handful of cases out to about 10 years of deafness and while there was a general trend towards poorer outcomes the longer the deafness, I was surprised at the variability. That is, there was a participant whoâd been deaf for 7 years who had very good outcomes (80% word rec), although they were a bit of an outliar. However, 10 years is quite different from a lifetime.
This is from an April article.
âFarequency Therapeutics says theyâve already given the treatment to more than 200 people, and seen significant improvements in patientsâ hearing in three out of four clinical trials. The therapy is long-lasting â hearing has been improved for nearly two years in some cases â and it comes in the form of a single injection into the inner ear, making it much simpler and quicker than alternatives like gene therapy.â
Yes. Hair cells. Otherwise I could take goop people slather on their heads and squirt it into my ears
I already have too much hair in my ears. What a PITA.
WH
Ditto @WhiteHatâŚ. So much so, last week my nose and ear trimmer, gave up the ghost and packed in! Most probably died of overwork
Wow would I love to be a guinea pig and try out that drug! Iâm just curious if itâs JUST the hair cells that are critical for hearing? What if the cochlea was short of liquid? I know Iâm in the âcongenital cinderblock earsâ camp, so maybe thereâs no hope for me at 66 yrs old no matter what the treatment. But I still like to daydream about life with NO aids and being able to enjoy water sports while HEARING.
For what itâs worth, thereâs thisâŚ
Seems to me, that they might have found something that could advance Frequency Therapeuticsâ work. FX claim to be able to make hair cells from âprogenitorâ cells. It has only worked in a very limited way possibly because inner and outer hair cells are actually different. I still think FX is full of shit btw. I think they raised a lot of false hopes in search of investment capital.
My wife, you see, predicted what she believed would be my reaction to testing this. I didnât say a word. She said, âNo way youâre volunteering for that!â
Therefore: No way Iâm volunteering for that. LOL.
(Iâd love to)
Wow does that sound cool! So, Northwestern Medicine scientists have discovered this single âmasterâ gene that programs ear hair cells to be either inner or outer ones. This is better than creating just an artificial ear hair cell that canât distinguish inner from outer.
When that master gene, TBX2, is expressed, it can configure the ear hair cells and restore hearing. But if I was born already fairly deaf (granted, itâs gotten worse over the decades), does that mean I didnât have enough TBX2 in my embryonic stage?
Or can this research actually inject these genes into me now, and they could start triggering the right ear hair cells to start hearing again?
Hi @1Bluejay. The only question I feel comfortable in answering is your last one and Iâm pretty sure the answer unfortunately is ânoâ. Itâs only experimental and even if they developed a drug of some kind, it would have to go through pre-clinical in the lab and then phase 1, phase 2, and phase 3 human trials.
So itâs âfurthers our understanding ofâ and "opens up exciting new possiblilities for " etc etc.
Worth trying anything while we wait! Playing tones daily just below threshold has been touted as a way to stimulate regrowth, or at the least re-awaken neural pathways between ear and brain.
Another suggestion I saw was to eat or drink grapefruit which allegedly has a beneficial ingredient (apart from the Vitamin C).
Just might be something in it: apparently pineapple, with its bromelin, is good for eye-floaters, or so a lab trial found. So I tried it, three fresh-cut rings a day. Floaters persisted, but a very long standing astigmatism in one eye went away, and the focus permanently improved - to the extent I actually needed a weaker spectacle lens. Just sayinâ - as they say!
Iâm really pleased you posted this.
Iâm always interested in new aids for health & wellbeing.
I have astigmatisms. I hate the corrective feature. My eyesight is good enough I could do without spectacles without astigmatism. Iâm far-sighted now (a little bit) after being near sighted all my life. Life would be better if I only needed to wear glasses to read.
My hearing lossâgets about 5% worse every year.
Hello DaveL
Glad the nutritional angle was of interest. âWe are what we eatâ etc. Sorry to learn you are aware of your hearing diminishing. Still wondering if vulnerability to noise damage may vary from person to person. My audiologist agrees âfragile earsâ may exist, but isnât aware of any formal research so far.
âŚand actually, DaveL, my astigmatism started 40 years ago when I let untrimmed hair prickle my right eyeball for about three weeks when I was doing concentrated work. It started just like that. A kind of acupuncture perhaps! Was no bother until age added the usual reduction in focal accommodation, and I visited an optician.
I worked in a noisy power house and factory from '71 to '88. About '80 they decided to focus on hearing to prevent future claimsâŚPower house was 110 dB. Machine shopâthey never measured noise levels. They referred me to the local university for further testing. Thatâs where many Canadian audiologists goâŚCompany Doc said I noise levels were fine (yeah sure) but that I should wear hearing protection anytime I went into the factory.
I have a claim for hearing loss due to exposure to noise.
DaveL