For me, this is a profound moment. It will be even more profound if many people can benefit from it.
Some of you may know that I suffer about an 85% hearing loss, and even with powerful hearing aids I still have very poor hearing which has gotten almost non-functional over the years. It makes me a social hermit since I don’t function well in public. It is part of the reason I became a broadcaster, because I had such a terrible time in college lectures and with language requirements in the school of science. In broadcasting, I only had to talk to the camera or to the microphone. It was a job that was not only a dream come true, it brought me out of my shell that many hearing impaired people live in due to the social isolation it brings.
I started losing my hearing as a child due to being treated with the antibiotic Tetracycline, which is known to be ototoxic. By the time I was 10, I needed hearing aids, but fortunately, I had formed my primary speech skills. Many other people who lose hearing as children aren’t so lucky as I and have speech problems as a result.
I knew this day would come, I predicted that gene therapy to treat cochlear nerve deafness would be coming over 10 years ago. I can only hope I can be able to take advantage of it someday. I won’t hide my own selfishness, I want to be one of those people.

Deaf people get gene tweak to restore natural hearing
People who have lost their hearing will be injected with a harmless virus carrying a gene that should trigger the regrowth of their ears’ sensory receptors
IN TWO months’ time, a group of profoundly deaf people could be able to hear again, thanks to the world’s first gene therapy trial for deafness.
The volunteers, who lost their hearing through damage or disease, will get an injection of a harmless virus containing a gene that should trigger the regrowth of the sensory receptors in the ear.
The idea is that the method will return a more natural sense of hearing than other technologies can provide. Hearing aids merely amplify sounds, while cochlear implants transform sound waves into electrical waves that the brain interprets, but they don’t pick up all of the natural frequencies. This means people can find it difficult to distinguish many of the nuances in voices and music.
“The holy grail is to give people natural hearing back,” says Hinrich Staecker at the University of Kansas Medical Center, who is leading the trial. “That’s what we hope to do – we are essentially repairing the ear rather than artificially imitating what it does.”
There are still many things we don’t know about how the ear works. This is because the delicate machinery of the inner ear is enclosed in the hardest bone in the body, making it difficult to isolate without causing damage.
What we do know is that sound waves are funnelled into the ear, making the ear drum vibrate. These vibrations are transferred to the cochlea in the inner ear via three tiny bones. Thousands of sensory receptors line a part of the cochlea called the organ of Corti, as rows of inner and outer hair cells. Sound waves, amplified by the outer hair cells (shown above right), vibrate the inner hair cells, opening ion channels on their surface that let neurotransmitters flow in. This triggers electrical activity in the cochlear neurons, passing the information to the brain so it can be processed.
Both inner and outer hair cells can be damaged by loud noises, drugs such as some antibiotics and disease, and don’t regrow. A possible fix arose in 2003, when researchers discovered that certain genes can transform the cells supporting the hair cells into both types of hair cell.
Complete story here.
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Very good news, indeed, if it pans out in practice. I hope you may benefit.
Good luck! We need you.
Oh, dear Anthony!
This is WONDERFUL news. Thank you for sharing.
A girlfriend of mine (had to quit her job as a cop and was then, like you, “on stage” as a “deaf” trial attorney –tough!) has cochlear implants, but, as the article said, they are good, but not-quite-there… .
(I hope you won’t mind my telling you that I will be praying very hard about this for you.)
With a big smile and HIGH HOPES for you,
Janice
…can I get in line right behind you?
I wonder if tinnitus might be treatable eventually, by this or similar approaches. My wife and I have a constant “radiator hiss”, which fortunately we are able to tune out much of the time, but others have far more serious cases.
Best news I’ve had in a year. Good luck! I would pray for you if I was a religious person.
Age related deafness cured??? That would be something special. I remember my grandfather who became progressively more deaf as he aged. It was an obstacle that he hated and, as you pointed out, isolated him from his family and friends. I hope this works!!
This is amazing news.
Do you know how soon after the trial this would be available?
I’m guessing they would only do one ear at a time as with cataract operations and such.
Wow, I hope this works. 🙂
Anthony, I want you to be part of this first test group that gets the injections. Move to Kansas if you have, too. Give them your house if it will help. Do whatever you have to do to regain your hearing. With normal hearing, your life will be so much happier and more successful. If you need donations to cover the cost, set up an account. Lets make this happen.
I’m going to inject the top of my head.
STAN STENDERA!
Hi.
#(:))
Freakin cool! I’ve studied ototoxic hearing loss. Mother had it. And many veterans that came through our VA lab had it. This is awesome!
“If you need donations to cover the cost, set up an account. Let’s make this happen.” John Coleman
YES!
Do, Anthony!
@ur momisugly Janice, @ur momisugly John
““If you need donations to cover the cost, set up an account. Let’s make this happen.”
I cannot in good conscience do that, we don’t even know if it will work yet or if I could even get on the trial. But, thank you for the kind words.
Latitude
…can I get in line right behind you?
And me next please!
Will it help me learn Central American Spanish lingo?
These seventy-year-old connections deliver neither what I read nor what I remember from four decades ago, in Asturias.
Wear ear plugs and dark glasses for as long as it takes to become accustomed to all those
sounds.
Great news for all of us. . . . thanks
A harmless virus . . . and with my luck, I’d get my hearing back, but all my hair would fall out, and my skin would turn blue.
Thank you for sharing the above information. My ear doc has informed me of minor nerve damage requiring a special adjustment for my hearing aids. Knowing of the Atohl1 gene gives me something to talk with him about.
Knowing the frustrations inherent with poor hearing, I do wish you well.
Pete
I too have a hearing problem. Unlike Anthony’s case, it is not as severe and I find it manageable. Gene theapy, stem cells, activating the body’s systems at the molecular level has always been the most promising way forward. Just think if this actually worked.
Reminds me of the days when people complained of ulcers. Many people in fact. Then an Australian researcher suggested it might be caused by bacterial infection and anti-bacterial therapies might cure the condition. Ridiculed for many years, it was not the consensus position. Massive profits were being made on ulcer medications that didn’t really work at all. But now, no one talks about ulcers anymore because it is a condition of the past. Real science, real objective science. Real science.
Hoping it turns to reality soon!
I don’t know Anthony. With the current backlash against GMOs in the food industry, do you think the blogosphere is ready for a host who’s a Genetically Modified Organism?
Best of luck, I sincerely hopes this proves to be real science and not the equivalent of ‘climate science’.
May I humbly suggest waiting for the second or third test groups? There’s a lot to be said for not being first with the latest car, cell phone, or other technology. Let them work the kinks out first. 🙂
“…a harmless virus carrying a gene that should trigger the regrowth of their ears’ sensory receptors…a group of profoundly deaf people could be able to hear again…”
Works in mice, but if it had been up to me, I would have made the announcement after a successful human trial, lest false hopes be raised and dashed. Best wishes for success.
This is good AND ethical science at work. Viral gene therapy, with adult experimentation with all the appropriate permissions in place and positive results. Nobody is exploited. Nobody’s body parts were taken without permission.
Fantastic.
Only one question, If the virus carries a gene to convert hair support cells inti the cilia, what is preventing the gene from entering hair support cells elsewhere on the body. – side effect, cure for male pattern baldness. Chaching!!!