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New Innovations in Hearing Loss

New Innovations in Hearing Loss

New Innovations in Hearing Loss

To start off our New Year, I think it is important to look at what new innovations are coming from researchers in the area of hearing loss.  Recent research on the inner ear may provide hope for getting some hearing back once it is lost. The National Institutes of Health funded research that has discovered a way to replace the delicate cells in the inner ear that enable us to hear. Using inner ear tissue from mice, non-human primates, and humans, the scientists grew a large batch of the delicate sound-detecting cells, called hair cells. The new study shows that the scientists can grow enough hair cells to test possible drug treatments for hearing loss in living cells.

Scientists on the team represented Harvard Medical School, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary, and Brigham and Women’s Hospital, and reported their findings in the February 21, 2017, issue of Cell Reports. Their big breakthrough came when they identified two small molecules that, when added to their earlier recipe for growing hair cells, helped them to increase the number of hair cells they could grow in the laboratory. A similar technique also helped them grow significantly more hair cells from non-human primate and human ear tissue. This is important because they now have enough cells to test potential drug treatments for hearing loss in living cells from both animal models and humans.

Hair cells detect sound and send sound information to the parts of our brain that interpret and respond to the sound. Our hair cells can be damaged or destroyed by exposure to loud noise, injury, and certain medications. Although fish and birds can replace damaged hair cells, mammals, including humans, cannot. Scientists have long sought to overcome this human inability to replace lost hair cells.

As their next step, the team will try to identify drugs that encourage lab-grown hair cells to multiply. They hope to use those drugs directly on damaged human inner ears to stimulate replacement of lost hair cells.

Retrieved from “U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, It’s a Noisy Planet, Protect Your Hearing, October, 2017”

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