Archive for January, 2010

Antibiotic Found To Protect Hearing In Mice

A type of antibiotic that can cause hearing loss in people has been found to paradoxically protect the ears when given in extended low doses in very young mice. The surprise finding came from researchers at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis who looked to see if loud noise and the antibiotic [...]

Florida Commits To Provide Effective Communication For Deaf And Hard-of-Hearing Persons

The Florida Department of Children and Families (DCF) will provide qualified sign language interpreters as required by federal law to deaf and hard-of-hearing persons using its programs and services across the state under a Settlement Agreement reached with the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS)…

Let’s Hear It For Audiologists, Europe

Hearing professionals working in the NHS have a chance to be recognised as the country’s best following the launch of an exciting audiology competition. The 2010 Audiologist of the Year award has been launched to find the year’s outstanding hearing professional…

Going To The Gym Shouldn’t Be A Workout For Your Eardrums

Listening to an iPod while working out feels like second nature to many people, but University of Alberta researcher Bill Hodgetts says we need to consider the volume levels in our earphones while working up a sweat…

New Grants For Research Into Hearing Disorders, UK

Lives of millions of people with hearing difficulties may soon benefit from several new grants for research from leading medical research charity, deafness research UK. One of the grants for a pilot study involves finding out if [...]

E-A-R™ Hearing Conservation Clinics Presented By 3M

2010 marks the 30th year of the E-A-R™ Hearing Conservation Clinics. These educational seminars, presented by 3M, provide practical information on how to enhance hearing conservation programs that help protect workers who are exposed to on-the-job noise…

Research Lays The Foundation For Improving Human Speech

Scientists at Duke University Medical Center have identified neurons in the songbird brain that convey the auditory feedback needed to learn a song. Their research lays the foundation for improving human speech, for example, in people whose auditory nerves are damaged and who must learn to speak without the benefit of hearing their own voices…

Caffeine Abstinence: An Ineffective And Potentially Distressing Tinnitus Therapy

New research has found giving up caffeine does not relieve tinnitus and acute caffeine withdrawal might add to the problem. This is the first study of its kind to look at the effect of caffeine consumption on tinnitus…

Key To Developing Auditory Neurons Found

Loss of spiral ganglion neurons or hair cells in the inner ear is the leading cause of congenital and acquired hearing impairment. Researchers at the University of California, San Diego, School of Medicine and the National Institutes of Health found that Sox2, a protein that regulates stem cell formation, is involved in spiral ganglion neuron [...]

Toddlers’ Communication Rehabilitation Process Assisted By Music Therapy

Music therapy can assist in the speech acquisition process in toddlers who have undergone cochlear implantation, as revealed in a new study by Dr. Dikla Kerem of the University of Haifa. The study was carried out in Israel as a doctoral thesis for Aalborg University in Denmark (supervised by Prof. Tony Wigram) and presented at [...]