> Dr Anthony Cacace and Dr Steven Silver will develop a database of
> images that show brain activity in people who have normal hearing and
> no tinnitus. This database will later become the baseline for research
> that may show how the brains of people with noise-induced tinnitus
> differ from others.
Sounds very promising to me.
> Dr Donald Caspary
> By comparing functional and chemical changes in animals with and
> without tinnitus Dr Caspary and colleagues will attempt to 1)
> determine if tinnitus-related changes develop in nerve cells, and
> whether these changes are the result of brain chemical changes related
> to glycine.
Sounds very intriguing to me.
> How much money is this going to cost. To no avail?
Why does this concern you if it's not tax dollars?
> I like this comment best:
> fyfpoon@gmail.com wrote:
>
> >I think by and large they are
> >looking at tinnitus from a direction that will never get them the
> >answer.
Great- your credibility goes way down when you quote from the
village idiot.
frank
fyfpoon@gmail.com - 01 Oct 2005 13:32 GMT
If the village idiot happens to help more tinnitus patients than a
high-tech doctor like you, what would you call yourself? A super idiot?
Larry Lix - 01 Oct 2005 15:22 GMT
Has to be a funNaglering personality I guesss.
Some can run but never hide.
If the village idiot happens to help more tinnitus patients than a
high-tech doctor like you, what would you call yourself? A super idiot?