Medicine:Tinnitracks

From HandWiki
Tinnitracks
Developer(s)Sonormed GmbH
TypeHealth care

Tinnitracks is a digital therapy app designed for the treatment of tinnitus through audio therapy. Treatment involves listening to music at specific frequencies that cause a patient's tinnitus to be filtered out.[1] The app is designed to take the music a patient regularly listens to and adapt it to a specified frequency, determined by visiting an ENT specialist, that will help filter out the patient's tinnitus.[2] The software was developed and is marketed by Sonormed GmbH.

The concept behind this treatment has been developed and researched by the University of Muenster, Germany . Tinnitracks was developed based on this research and provides access to the treatment beyond academic research programs.

Technology

Patients with tinnitus can use the Tinnitracks software to filter their individual tinnitus frequency from their music songs.[3] By processing a song, the defined frequency is extracted, creating a gap called a "notch" in the frequency profile that covers the exact tinnitus frequency as well as about an octave around it. Afterwards, the software checks if the audio profile of the song meets the criteria for the tinnitus treatment.[4] Accuracy of frequency measurement is paramount in the process, which is why patients are required to visit ENT specialists or acousticians to create an accurate tinnitus audiogram.[5]

Treatment

Tinnitracks is based on the "Tailor-Made Notched Music Training" ("TMNMT") system.[6][7] This approach uses filtered music to reduce the tinnitus volume. As emphasised by the name, TMNMT ("Tailor-Made"), the importance of individualisation in calibrating the initial set-up is crucial, and refers both to the patient's individual tinnitus frequency profile and the use of the patient's favourite music. By filtering from the music, frequencies which match the frequency profile of the patient's tinnitus, those over-reactive, or misfiring, areas of the auditory cortex become less reactive. The aim is to eliminate the stimulation of those specific cortical areas by filtering out the frequencies that stimulate them.[8]

Awards and recognition

It has received some awards [9] and won several start-up competitions, among them the SXSW Accelerator in the category "Digital Health & Life Sciences Technologies" at the 2015 South by Southwest Interactive Festival.[10]

References

  1. "Tinnitracks application helps to relieve your tinnitus" (in en). 2016-04-20. https://www.hearingaidknow.com/tinnitracks-tinnitus-treatment-reduce-music. 
  2. Fact (2015-03-19). "An app that claims to heal tinnitus is making waves at SXSW" (in en-US). https://www.factmag.com/2015/03/19/tinnitus-treatment-app-tinnitracks/. 
  3. "When Old Tech Meets Medical Innovation – Meet Tinnitracks". MedCrunch.et. http://www.medcrunch.net/tech-meets-medical-innovation-meet-tinnitracks/. Retrieved 2015-05-07. 
  4. "Tinnitracks – fighting tinnitus with music". Digitalhealthgermany.com. 2014-06-20. http://www.digitalhealthgermany.com/97/tinnitracks/. Retrieved 2015-05-07. 
  5. "Tinnitracks - TRIAS Verlag - Gesundheit". Thieme.de. https://www.thieme.de/de/gesundheit/tinnitracks-59941.htm. Retrieved 2015-05-07. 
  6. "Tailor-Made Notched Music Training - TMNMT". TMNMT.com. http://www.tmnmt.com. Retrieved 2015-05-07. 
  7. Okamoto H, Stracke H, Stoll W, Pantev C (2010). "Listening to tailor-made notched music reduces tinnitus loudness and tinnitus-related auditory cortex activity". Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 107 (3): 1207–10. doi:10.1073/pnas.0911268107. PMID 20080545. Bibcode2010PNAS..107.1207O. 
  8. "Tinnitracks App Could Heal Hearing Damage and Tinnitus" (in en-US). 2015-03-22. https://djtechtools.com/amp/2015/03/22/tinnitracks-app-could-heal-hearing-damage-and-tinnitus/. 
  9. "Health & Wellbeing: Tinnitracks wins first Idea Challenge finals". Eitictlabs.eu. https://www.eitictlabs.eu/news-events/news/article/health-wellbeing-tinnitracks-wins-first-idea-challenge-finals/#allView. Retrieved 2015-05-07. 
  10. Stephanie Baum (15 March 2015). "Update: Which 3 digital health, life science companies made it to SXSW Accelerator Day 2?". MedCityNews.com. http://medcitynews.com/2015/03/3-digital-health-companies-made-sxsw-accelerator-day-2/. Retrieved 2015-05-07.