This article is from the archives of the UB Reporter.
News

UB student awarded research grant to ‘stop the noise’

  • “I wanted to do research that is clinically relevant—research with the goal of helping people suffering from a disorder, or helping to find cures for different neurological disorders.”

    Sarah Hayes
    Recipient, American Tinnitus Association research grant
By MARCENE ROBINSON
Published: June 7, 2012

UB neuroscience PhD student Sarah Hayes has won a $10,000 grant from the American Tinnitus Association (ATA) to aid her in her search for the causes of tinnitus.

While many people have never heard of tinnitus, about one in five has experienced the condition, characterized as a phantom sound in the ears, such as ringing or buzzing. The group of people Hayes is focusing her research on is the 1 percent of the population who hear the sound regularly at debilitating levels.

Hayes, now in her third year in the PhD program in neuroscience—an interdisciplinary program of the School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences—first was introduced to tinnitus while working in the lab of Richard Salvi, SUNY Distinguished Professor in the Department of Communicative Disorders and Sciences, College of Arts and Sciences. She became so interested in the subject that she took up researching causes of the condition for her thesis.

“I wanted to do research that is clinically relevant—research with the goal of helping people suffering from a disorder, or helping to find cures for different neurological disorders,” says Hayes, a native of Hamburg who received her BS in biology from Canisius College. “But I’m also interested by the fact that it is a phantom auditory perception. I think trying to understand how we perceive the world is fascinating.”

There currently is no cure for tinnitus, and Hayes believes that this is mainly due to the condition not being fully understood.

It previously was believed that tinnitus was a result of damage to the inner ear, but studies conducted in the 1990s by Salvi, a member of the Tinnitus Research Initiative, and his colleagues produced findings that suggested the condition originated in the brain.

Tinnitus has been linked to noise-induced hearing loss as well. Aside from the elderly, military personnel make up a large population of the people affected by the condition, as some soldiers are constantly exposed to loud blasts and explosions.

The U.S. Department of Defense is so concerned with the issue that it is backing Hayes’ research, providing her with the National Defense Science and Engineering Graduate Fellowship that includes full tuition remission and an annual stipend.

For her thesis, Hayes will look into the relationship between stress and tinnitus. One of the major potential factors associated with tinnitus is chronic stress. Although tinnitus itself causes stress, elevated stress can worsen the condition and even make the perceived sound louder. At present, the mechanism through which chronic stress may contribute to the generation of tinnitus is unknown.

Hayes will use her award from the ATA, the largest nonprofit organization working to cure tinnitus, to purchase lab equipment and supplies.

At the moment, she conducts all of her tests using animal models of tinnitus, but is working on an AuD in clinical audiology from the UB Department of Communicative Disorders and Sciences, a degree that will give her the necessary credentials to work with people.

“Having a clinical audiology degree will allow me to work with human patients and adapt discoveries we find in the lab to work in humans,” she says.

While she is not yet working with human patients in her lab, Hayes can hear firsthand how the condition affects their lives through the Tinnitus Support Group run by the UB Center for Hearing and Deafness.