I picked up mine spending time on heavy equipment and the demolition range
more than on stage. My office mate who flew large dual engine helo's till he
retired got his from turbine noise.

I shared with him this recent article. He says he isn't quite ready to give
it a try.

http://www.breitbart.com/article.php?id=CNG.f57c40c34c2baca8600a698953d8
2048.1e1&show_article=1     

Scientists have found a way to ease chronic ringing in the ears, known
as tinnitus, by stimulating a neck nerve and playing sounds to reboot
the brain, according to research published Wednesday.
There is currently no cure for tinnitus, which can range from annoying
to debilitating and affects as many as 23 million adults in the United
States, including one in 10 seniors and 40 percent of military veterans.


For Gloria Chepko, 66, who has suffered from tinnitus since she was four
years old, the sound she describes as "like crickets... but also
bell-like," gets worse when she is tired.

"It's awful," she said. "Sometimes it is very loud, and it will get loud
if I am under stress or if I have been going for a very long time and I
am fatigued," she said.

"If my mind is tired and I sit down I will only hear this sound."

For some people, such as military veterans who are left with hearing
damage after exposure to loud blasts and gunfire, the noise -- which
could also sound like roaring, whooshing or clicking -- interferes with
their ability to lead a normal life.

The US Veterans Administration spends one billion dollars per year on
disability payments related to tinnitus, the most common service-related
ailment in soldiers returning from Iraq and Afghanistan, industry
experts say.

Scientists believe the disorder is caused by hearing loss or nerve
damage, to which the brain tries but fails to adjust.

"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," said Michael Kilgard of the University of
Texas, co-author of the study in the journal Nature.

"We believe the part of the brain that processes sounds -- the auditory
cortex -- delegates too many neurons to some frequencies, and things
begin to go awry," he said.

To fix that, researchers used rats to test a theory that they could
reset the brain by retraining it so that errant neurons return to their
normal state.

In rats with tinnitus, they electrically stimulated the vagus nerve,
which runs from the head through the neck to the abdomen, in combination
with playing a certain high-pitched tone.

When stimulated, the nerve can encourage changes in the brain by
releasing chemicals such as acetylcholine and norepinephrine that act as
neurotransmitters.

Rats that underwent the pairing of noise and stimulation experienced a
halt to the ringing sounds for up to three and a half months, while
control rats that received just noise or just stimulation did not.

An examination of neural responses in the auditory cortexes showed
normal levels in the rats who were treated with the combination of
stimulation and sound, indicating the tinnitus had disappeared.

The treatment "not only reorganized the neurons to respond to their
original frequencies, but it also made the brain responses sharper," the
study said.

"The key is that, unlike previous treatments, we're not masking the
tinnitus, we're not hiding the tinnitus," said Kilgard.

"We are returning the brain from a state where it generates tinnitus to
a state that does not generate tinnitus. We are eliminating the source
of the tinnitus."

Clinical trials are expected to begin on humans in the coming months,
with the first trials starting in Europe, according to lead study author
Navzer Engineer.

The process of vagus nerve stimulation, known as VNS, is already being
used in the treatment of around 50,000 people with epilepsy or
depression, the study said.

"This minimally invasive method of generating neural plasticity allows
us to precisely manipulate brain circuits, which cannot be achieved with
drugs," said Engineer.

"Pairing sounds with VNS provides that precision by rewiring damaged
circuits and reversing the abnormal activity that generates the phantom
sound."

Like many sufferers, Chepko has learned to cope with the noise.

"I have to find some other way to relax to just endure it, take a bath
or do stretches or just lie down and stare or read a book, depending on
how bad it is," she said.

"I have kind of lived around it, or over it."

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