Acúfeno: El tinnitus o acúfenos es un fenómeno perceptivo que consiste en notar golpes o pitidos en el oído, que no proceden de ninguna fuente externa. Puede ser provocado por gran número de causas, generalmente traumáticas.
[quote:233vkqbe][b:233vkqbe]Metallica drummer struggles with ringing in ears[/b:233vkqbe]
Albany, New York (CNN) -- The noise in the concert hall is loud, throbbing. The crowd chants, "Metallica ... Metallica!"
Lars Ulrich holds a drumstick high above his head. For a split second, the frenzy quiets to a dull roar. Ulrich brings his drumstick down with a crash and is swallowed by astonishing noise -- wailing guitars, thumping bass and his own furious banging on the drums.
"I've been playing loud rock music for the better part of 35 years," said Ulrich, 46, drummer for the heavy metal band Metallica. "I never used to play with any kind of protection."
Early in his career, without protection for his ears, the loud noise began to follow Ulrich off-stage.
"It's this constant ringing in the ears," Ulrich said. "It never sort of goes away. It never just stops."
Except the ringing is not spurred by actual sound. It is a condition called tinnitus, a perception of sound where there is none.
"It's a phantom auditory sensation like phantom limb pain when an arm is cut off, and you feel pain in that missing limb," said Richard Salvi, a leading tinnitus expert and director of the Center For Hearing and Wellness at the University at Buffalo in New York. "Much the same seems to happen when you have tinnitus."
Tinnitus can be persistent or intermittent. It often is perceived as a high-pitched ringing in the ears but also can sound like buzzing, whistling, whooshing or clicking.
More than 50 million people in the U.S. experience some degree of tinnitus, according to the American Tinnitus Association. For 12 million of those afflicted, the noise is disabling.
At first, Ulrich said the ringing in his ears was barely perceptible. He said the problem got worse during a 1988 concert tour, oddly while he slept.
"I would fall asleep often with the television on, and I would wake up in the middle of the night to go turn the TV off," Ulrich said. "Except it wasn't actually on. When I realized that I was doing that frequently, actually getting up to turn the TV off that was not on to begin with, I realized that maybe I had some issues."
Theories abound, but scientists do not know precisely what causes tinnitus. There is a common thread: loud noise.
"The most reported known cause is noise exposure, excessive noise levels," said Norma Mraz, a doctor of audiology in Atlanta, Georgia. "That can be from machinery, lawn equipment, children's toys, iPods. Things that people are exposing themselves to repeatedly and not taking the proper precautions to protect their hearing."
Mraz said tinnitus may begin with damage to hair cells in the cochlea, a structure in the ear that turns outside sounds into nerve impulses that are sent to the brain.
"It's like walking through the grass," Mraz said. "As you walk initially it lies down, but it bounces back up. If you keep [walking] that same path over and over again, those hair cells, or the grass, will stay down. Then you begin to rip the blades of grass out, and now you've hit dirt. The same thing happens with hair cells. We don't regenerate hair cells."
As hair cells deteriorate the brain may be compensating, generating the perception of "ringing" or "buzzing" in the ear.
Salvi said the easiest way to understand how the brain may do this is to imagine listening to an AM radio station while driving several miles out of town. Eventually, the radio signal begins to fade.
"I reach down to my radio and turn up the volume control. I hear a signal but also noise and static," Salvi said. "With tinnitus, the ear is damaged; it's no longer picking up a signal and sending it to the brain, so the brain basically turns up the volume. You start hearing static electrical activity in the brain that normally is dampened down or suppressed."
Exposure to loud noise is only one of several possible triggers for tinnitus.
According to the American Tinnitus Association, head and neck trauma, certain tumors, wax buildup and medications such as aspirin and certain antibiotics may also be to blame. Hearing loss that is typical with advancing age also could lead to tinnitus.
Ulrich said his issues developed over time -- after several long, loud tours with Metallica.
While Ulrich experienced sustained loud noise in big doses, a single, jarring noise can trigger many cases of tinnitus such as those heard on construction sites or during gun blasts and roadside bombings suffered by war veterans. A recent study by the Department of Veterans Affairs' Office of Policy and Planning rated tinnitus as one of most common disabilities among returning war veterans.
"The military is generating a tremendous number of tinnitus patients," Salvi said.
Treatments to manage tinnitus include sound therapy and counseling sessions that help patients to understand, even ignore, the ringing in their ears. Salvi said that merely convincing some patients that they don't have a brain tumor can alleviate anxiety about tinnitus, which may mitigate some of the noise.
As he began suffering with hearing loss and tinnitus early in his career, Ulrich protected himself with earplugs while performing. While his condition still nags him, he said the tinnitus could have been worse, and over the years he's learned to tolerate it.
Ulrich said he is concerned about young people, the so-called iPod generation, who listen to loud music, and may not be as vigilant about protecting their ears.
"If you get a scratch on your nose, in a week that'll be gone," Ulrich said. "When you scratch your hearing or damage your hearing, it doesn't come back. I try to point out to younger kids ... once your hearing is gone, it's gone, and there's no real remedy."[/quote:233vkqbe]
[quote:3ui5luoc]Una nueva terapia musical personalizada puede reducir de manera duradera el "Tinnitus" o zumbido en los oídos, según el estudio del grupo del científico Christo Pantev del Instituto de Biomagnetismo y Análisis de Bioseñales de la Universidad de Munster.
La investigación, publicada en la revista estadunidense "Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America" (PNAS), señaló que las personas que escuchan música de manera regular, con la exclusión de las frecuencias del zumbido en los oídos de cada persona, provocará que ese disturbio cada vez sea más débil a largo plazo.
Durante un año, Pantev y su equipo de investigación del Instituto de Munster hicieron escuchar a sus pacientes su música preferida, a la que previamente habían eliminado los correspondientes tonos. El resultado fue que el zumbido en los oídos se redujo paulatinamente.
"Después de un año de someterse a esta terapia musical, los pacientes mostraron una reducción sustantiva en el volumen del zumbido comparado con aquellos que habían escuchado música no personalizada", señaló el equipo en el estudio.
"La disminución de los pitidos, murmullos o zumbidos puede deberse a la disminución de la estimulación de los nervios de los oídos, que se ven afectados por el tinnitus", explicaron los científicos alemanes.
El tinnitus es una alteración frecuente en la audición de las personas en los países industrializados. Según una encuesta de Forsa de este año, alrededor de un 10 por ciento de los alemanes padecen esta disfunción en el sistema auditivo.
"El tinnitus puede manifestarse de manera muy diferente dependiendo de la persona. Los pitidos, murmullos o zumbidos pueden ser para un 1.0 a 3.0 por ciento de la población tan molesto, que les limite fuertemente su calidad de vida", escribió Pantev.
Hasta el momento existe un gran número de terapias, desde medicamentos con cortisona o acupuntura hasta un entrenamiento de biorregulación para aprender a controlar las funciones del organismo con respuestas específicas, como la contracción de un grupo muscular y alterando las respuestas a través de la relajación.
También existen tratamientos con láser o terapias psicológicas. Sin embargo, no se ha conseguido de momento ningún efecto completo para solucionar el problema.
En concreto, el grupo de investigación dirigido por Pantev trató con una terapia musical a 23 pacientes afectados por esta disfunción en los oídos. A 16 de ellos, se les hizo escuchar diariamente su música preferida.
Dentro de esos 16, a ocho se les ajustó el espectro de frecuencias de la música de manera individual.
Los investigadores filtraron de manera exacta las frecuencias de la música correspondientes a la frecuencia del tinnitus de cada paciente. A los otro ocho se les hizo escuchar música con un filtro que eliminaba algunas frecuencias de la música, pero no las correspondientes con su tinnitus.
Los otro siete pacientes de los 23 elegidos para el estudio no fueron tratados con música.
Las personas que participaron en el estudio comprendían un rango de edad de entre los 18 y los 55 años, con un zumbido en el oído de entre dos mil 375 y ocho mil hercios, y todos ellos escucharon antes del estudio entre siete y 21 horas a la semana de música.
En la actualidad, existen diversas teorías sobre la aparición del tinnitus. Puede ser temporal o permanente y es relativamente común. A menudo se asocia con deficiencias auditivas, envejecimiento o exposición a sonidos fuertes.
Los científicos suponen en la actualidad que el origen del problema se encuentra en la región del cerebro que controla la audición, cortex auditivo.
En base a ello, las neuronas dejan de responder a la frecuencia para la que están diseñadas y reaccionan también a las frecuencias vecinas, provocando una sobreactivación permanente. De esta manera, a mayor distorsión de las neuronas de esta área, mayores niveles de tinnitus padecerá la persona afectada.
El grupo de científicos alemanes consiguió reducir los niveles de ruido de los pacientes una cuarta parte en promedio. En algunos pacientes incluso se logró reducir en un 80 por ciento. [/quote:3ui5luoc]
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