View clinical trials related to Hyperacusis.
Filter by:Hyperacusis is the intolerance to sound levels that normally are judged acceptably loud to others. The presence of hyperacusis (diagnosed or undiagnosed) can be an important reason why some persons reject amplified sound from hearing aids. Tinnitus Retraining Therapy (TRT), originally proposed for the treatment of persons with debilitating tinnitus, offers the significant secondary benefit of increased Loudness Discomfort Levels (LDLs), along with expansion of the dynamic range for loudness. TRT uses both counseling and sound therapy from daily exposure to soft sound from bilateral noise generator devices (NGs) and has been promoted as an intervention for hyperacusis. The hypothesis of this investigational study is that the counseling and sound therapy principles used in TRT can be applied successfully to treat hearing-impaired hearing-aid candidates with reduced sound tolerance who are otherwise should benefit from hearing aids.
Neuromonics TInnitus Treatment CALM study is a multi site study of 100 adult subjects with clinically significant disturbing tinnitus to evaluate outcome measures using the FDA cleared Neuromonics treatment after 6, 12, 24 and 36 months. Patients must be meet certain inclusion criteria and they are also required to pay for the all costs of the treatment. Subjects will be provided a modest participation fee at 6, 12, 24 and 36 months upon completion of patient questionnaires (subjects must have access to a computer and internet in order to complete on line questionnaires).
The purpose of this study is to determine whether chronic electrical stimulation of the primary auditory cortex is effective in the treatment of chronic, severe and intractable tinnitus