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The hearing aid you wear on your back teeth that could help those deaf in one ear
These sounds are then sent to a small transmitter, worn behind the ear (and smaller than a conventional hearing aid), which transmits them to a device in the mouth.
This device is roughly the size of half a matchstick and loops over the patient’s left or right back teeth, a bit like a wire for a dental plate.
Once it receives a sound transmission, the tooth device converts these signals into tiny vibrations, which are imperceptible to the user.
The vibrations are conducted via the teeth, through bone, to the working ear, where the sound vibrations are turned into nerve impulses, and sent to the brain.
Some types of hearing aid already use bone conduction, known as bone-anchored hearing aids.
With these devices, a small titanium plate is inserted into the back of the skull, behind the ear.
The plate detects sound vibrations, and sends these through the skull.
However, these need to be surgically fitted, and are visible on the outside of the head.
A study published in the journal Otology & Neurotology showed that the new device improved the ability of patients to understand speech in noisy environments by an average of 25 per cent, and that for one third of the patients, the improvement exceeded 30 per cent.
A year-long trial of the device, which costs around £600, is now under way at various centres across Europe, including University Hospital Southampton.
Commenting on the technology, Andrew McCombe, ear, nose and throat surgeon at Frimley Park Hospital, Surrey, said: ‘This is a very interesting and clever idea.
‘It also indicates that bone-anchored hearing aid research has come full circle — the very first bone-anchored hearing aids arose from dental implant work, following a chance discovery when a drill hit an implant and a deaf patient reported being able to hear it!
‘The big selling point here is likely to be convenience and avoiding surgery.’
Meanwhile, scientists have revealed that our brains are much more efficient at noticing the appearance of new sounds rather than the disappearance of existing ones.
They say this could explain why there is a delay in noticing that a room has gone quiet — the typical situation being when young children are up to mischief in another room.
The scientists, from University College London, studied response times in volunteers and revealed that the brain is finely tuned to noticing new sounds — a skill evolved from stone-age times to quickly detect potential dangers or predators.
However, detecting changing or disappearing sounds is not as crucial to survival, say the researchers, and as a consequence our brains take longer to detect them.
Read more: Hearing aid you wear on your back teeth could help those deaf in one ear | Mail Online
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