What’s that ringing in your ears? - Marc Fagelson

7,030,105 views ・ 2020-08-17

TED-Ed


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:07
Arriving home after a long day, you settle in for a quiet evening alone.
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But instead of the sound of silence, you hear a constant ringing—
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even though there’s nothing making any noise.
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What you’re experiencing is called tinnitus,
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the perception of a noise like ringing, buzzing, hissing or clicking
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that occurs without any external source of sound.
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Tinnitus has been bothering humanity since Ancient Babylon,
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plaguing everyone from Leonardo da Vinci to Charles Darwin.
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Today, roughly one in seven people worldwide
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experiences this auditory sensation.
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So where does this persistent sound come from?
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When you normally hear something, sound waves hit various areas of your ear,
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creating vibrations that displace fluid inside the cochlea.
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If the vibrations are large enough,
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they elicit a chemical response that transforms them
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into bioelectrical signals.
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These nerve impulses are then relayed through the hearing pathway to the brain,
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where they result in the sounds we perceive.
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However, in the vast majority of tinnitus cases,
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the nerve signals that produce these mysterious sounds
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don’t travel through your ear at all.
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Instead, they’re generated internally, by your own central nervous system.
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Under usual circumstances, these self-produced signals
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are an essential part of hearing.
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All mammals demonstrate on-going neural activity
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throughout their hearing pathways.
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When there are no sounds present,
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this activity is at a baseline that establishes your neural code
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for silence.
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When a sound does appear, this activity changes,
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allowing the brain to distinguish between silence and sound.
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But the auditory system’s health can affect this background signal.
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Loud noises, diseases, toxins, and even natural aging
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can damage your cochlear cells.
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Some of these may heal in a matter of hours.
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However, if enough cells die, either over time or all at once,
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the auditory system becomes less sensitive.
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With fewer cochlear cells relaying information,
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incoming sounds generate weaker nerve signals.
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And many environmental sounds can be lost completely.
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To compensate, your brain devotes more energy to monitoring the hearing pathway.
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Just like you might adjust the knobs of a radio,
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the brain modifies neural activity while also tweaking the tuning knob
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to get a clearer signal.
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Increasing this background neural activity is intended to help you process
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weak auditory inputs.
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But it can also modify your baseline for silence—
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such that a lack of sound no longer sounds silent at all.
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This is called subjective tinnitus,
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and it accounts for the vast majority of tinnitus cases.
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Subjective tinnitus is a symptom associated with
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practically every known ear disorder,
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but it isn’t necessarily a bad thing.
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While its appearance can be surprising,
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subjective tinnitus has no inherently negative consequences.
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But for some, tinnitus episodes can trigger traumatic memories
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or otherwise distressing feelings,
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which increase the sound’s intrusiveness.
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This psychological loop often leads to what’s known as “bothersome tinnitus,"
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a condition that can exacerbate the symptoms of PTSD, insomnia,
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anxiety, and depression.
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There’s no known cure for subjective tinnitus.
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So the most important thing doctors can do
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is help people understand this auditory event,
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and develop neutral associations with these often-distressing sounds.
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For example, sound therapy uses noises like rain, birdsong, or music
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to mask tinnitus and reduce stress.
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One form, called informational masking, uses soothing, complex auditory signals
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that distract the brain from the tinnitus sound.
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Another, called energetic masking,
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uses sounds with the same frequency as the patient’s tinnitus
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to occupy the neurons that would otherwise deliver the tinnitus signal.
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Practiced alongside counseling,
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these interventions allow people to re-evaluate
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their relationship with tinnitus.
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Losing the sound of silence can be troubling to say the least.
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Tinnitus reveals that your brain is constantly analyzing the world around you,
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even as it fails to filter its own internal noise.
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In a sense, experiencing tinnitus
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is like eavesdropping on your brain talking to itself—
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though it may not be a conversation you want to hear.
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