When you mention tinnitus to your doctor, the conversation usually goes one of two ways: they check your ears, find nothing structurally wrong, and either shrug or tell you to "learn to live with it." Or they prescribe a masking device and call it a day.
But neuroscientists have been quietly revolutionizing our understanding of this condition. What they've discovered is alarming in the best possible way: tinnitus is not primarily an ear condition. It is a brain condition. And this distinction changes everything about how we should approach treatment.
Wissenschaftliche Referenzen
- Kujawa, S.G., Liberman, M.C. (2009). "Adding insult to injury: cochlear nerve degeneration after 'temporary' noise-induced hearing loss." Journal of Neurowissenschaft. Harvard / Mass Eye and Ear. PubMed ID: 19940188
- Schaette, R., McAlpine, D. (2011). "Tinnitus with a normal audiogram: physiological evidence for hidden hearing loss." Journal of Neurowissenschaft. DOI: 10.1523/jneurosci.2156-11.2011
- Eggermont, J.J., Roberts, L.E. (2004). "The neuroscience of tinnitus." Trends in Neurowissenschafts. DOI: 10.1016/j.tins.2004.10.007
- Sedley, W. et al. (2016). "An integrative tinnitus model based on sensory precision." Trends in Neurowissenschafts. DOI: 10.1016/j.tins.2016.06.004
- World Health Organization. (2023). "World Report on Hearing." who.int