Geelong Advertiser

Sufferers all ears on tests

- PAT HAGAN

FOR more than half a century, hearing aids have been the only effective treatment for the millions of people struggling with deafness.

But they can be unsightly, uncomforta­ble and, in the eyes of some, label users as “old” before their time.

Now, British scientists are testing new drugs that could banish hearing aids for good for the estimated 900,000 people in Britain with moderate to severe deafness.

Two major clinical trials have started in recent months, which, it is hoped, will produce groundbrea­king medicines capable of helping millions who cannot hear properly.

Both studies involve injecting experiment­al medicines into the ear with the intention of repairing the damage that caused the hearing loss.

Scientists at University College London’s Ear Institute are taking part in an internatio­nal trial injecting a drug called a gamma-secretase inhibitor into the ears of 24 patients who have had partial deafness for up to 10 years and use a hearing aid.

They believe the drug will restore hearing by stimulatin­g the growth of healthy new ‘hair’ cells deep inside the ear.

In a healthy ear, sound enters the cochlea (a snailshape­d compartmen­t inside the ear) and is picked up by sensory cells that resemble tiny hairs.

These hairs convert sounds into an electrical impulse that can travel along the auditory nerve to the brain.

These hairs can be damaged or destroyed by ageing, loud noise or infection and, until recently, it was thought it was impossible to regenerate them.

But laboratory tests at the Massachuse­tts Eye and Ear Infirmary in Boston in 2013 found that injecting gammasecre­tase inhibitors into a type of cell called a progenitor cell led to the growth of healthy new hair cells.

Trials to measure how effective it is could now begin within the next few months.

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