PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Innovative imaging tool could improve diagnosis and treatment of hearing loss

Researchers from the Keck School of Medicine of USC have adapted a low-cost imaging method developed for ophthalmology and used it to visualize tiny structures in the human inner ear.

2025-07-23
(Press-News.org)

Optical coherence tomography (OCT), a tool routinely used to diagnose and plan treatment for eye diseases, has now been modified to collect images of the inner ear. A proof-of-concept study led by researchers at the Keck School of Medicine of USC found that OCT imaging can measure fluid levels in the inner ear, which correlate with a patient’s degree of hearing loss. The findings were just published in Science Translational Medicine.

“These findings are exciting because hearing loss can happen very suddenly, and we often don’t know why. OCT offers a way to explore the underlying cause and potentially guide treatment,” said senior author John Oghalai, MD, professor and chair in the Caruso Department of Otolaryngology – Head and Neck Surgery and the Leon J. Tiber and David S. Alpert Chair in Medicine at the Keck School of Medicine.

A sudden loss of hearing, sometimes accompanied by vertigo, happens in Ménière’s disease, cochlear hydrops and other ear conditions. One hallmark of these diseases is an imbalance of fluids in the inner ear, but measuring fluid balance is a challenge. The best available technology, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), lacks the resolution needed to reliably diagnose or guide treatment.

OCT offers a quicker, more accurate and less expensive way to see inner ear fluids, hair cells and other structures relevant to diagnosing and treating hearing loss. With funding from USC and the National Institutes of Health, Oghalai, Brian Applegate, PhD, professor of otolaryngology – head and neck surgery, and ophthalmology at the medical school and of biomedical engineering and electrical and computer engineering at USC Viterbi School of Engineering, and their team tested the new tool in 19 patients undergoing ear surgery for various conditions. They found that OCT could reliably detect fluid imbalance in the inner ear, which was correlated with the severity of a patient’s hearing loss. Although the tool is currently limited to use during surgery, the researchers are working to adapt it for application in the clinic.

The latest findings build on the team’s earlier work, where they used OCT to collect images of the cochlea in awake animals for the first time. With improvements, the tool could help clinicians more quickly find the cause of hearing loss, determine how to treat it, and even support efforts to develop new therapies to restore hearing, Oghalai said.

Measuring fluid balance

OCT uses light waves to scan tissue and create 3D images, similar to the way ultrasound produces images using sound waves.

The Keck School of Medicine team used the tool to scan the inner ears of 19 patients undergoing ear surgery. Six patients had normal inner ear function, four had Ménière’s disease, and nine had vestibular schwannoma (a benign tumor on a nerve that connects the inner ear to the brain). During surgery, a thick outer bone known as the mastoid was temporarily removed, allowing researchers to use OCT to collect images of the fluid compartments in the inner ear.

OCT images showed that patients with Ménière’s disease or vestibular schwannoma had higher levels of a fluid called endolymph, compared to those with normal inner ear function. Increased endolymph levels were linked to greater hearing loss, indicating that measuring these fluid levels could help predict the severity of symptoms.

“We’ve known for a long time that endolymph is related to hearing loss, but until now, measuring it in a living patient has been a major challenge,” Oghalai said.

A faster way to help

OCT can assist surgeons, including by helping to avoid damage to delicate ear structures and distinguishing brain tumors from healthy tissue. To this end, the researchers are working to develop a smaller, more affordable version of the tool that they plan to distribute and test with surgeons.

But OCT can benefit many more people if it can be used to collect images of the inner ear while patients are awake in the clinic. To achieve this goal, Oghalai, Applegate and their team have received federal funding and a Nemirovsky Engineering and Medicine Opportunity (NEMO) Prize from USC. They are now working to improve the software and image-processing techniques to obtain clear images from patients without removing the mastoid bone.

OCT could offer major benefits over MRI because it is less expensive, faster and can be done back-to-back to test treatment effectiveness. For example, a provider could collect an image, give medication treatment for a fluid imbalance, then take another image 30 minutes later.

“Patient symptoms—sensations of hearing loss, pressure in the ear, or vertigo—can be affected by many unrelated factors such as mood, stress, nasal congestion and allergies. However, inner ear fluid levels reliably assess what is going on inside the inner ear,” Oghalai said. “We have lots of treatment options available, but it often takes many weeks to figure out what works for a given patient. This could be a faster way to help.”

If OCT can be used outside the operating room, it can also support the development of new treatments for hearing loss. Several gene therapies, which aim to regenerate lost hair cells in the inner ear, are currently in clinical trials. OCT may provide a fast and precise way to test the effectiveness of such therapies by collecting images of hair cells as they grow.

“OCT helped researchers develop treatments for retinal diseases, including macular degeneration, so we’re hoping it can have a similar impact for hearing loss,” Oghalai said.

About this research

In addition to Oghalai and Applegate, the study’s other authors are Wihan Kim, Dorothy W. Pan, Bong Jik Kim, Zihan Yang, Marcela Moran Mojica, Joni K. Doherty and Seiji B. Shibata from the Caruso Department of Otolaryngology - Head and Neck Surgery, Keck School of Medicine of USC, University of Southern California.

This work was supported by the National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders of the National Institutes of Health [R01DC022232, R25DC019700]; the National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering of the National Institutes of Health [R01EB027113]; and University of Southern California Nemirovsky Engineering and Medicine Opportunity (NEMO) Prize.

 

Disclosure: John Oghalai and Brian Applegate are founders of AO technologies, with the goal of translating inner ear imaging technologies for clinical purposes.

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Researchers develop new microscope for neurovascular coupling imaging

2025-07-23
Neurovascular coupling (NVC) is the dynamic regulation of cerebral blood flow in response to neural activity. Specifically, when neurons become active, nearby blood vessels dilate to increase blood supply, thereby meeting the heightened energy demands associated with neural activity. NVC is essential for maintaining normal brain function and plays a critical role in non-invasive brain-computer interfaces (BCIs)—such as systems for controlling robotic arms or cursors. Unfortunately, conventional ...

Scientists propose AI-driven biotech model for future crop breeding

2025-07-23
In a major step toward securing global food supplies and advancing sustainable agriculture, a team of scientists has proposed an integrated framework that combines biotechnology and artificial intelligence (AI) to revolutionize crop breeding. Published in Nature on July 24, the review was co-corresponding authored by Prof. GAO Caixia from the Institute of Genetics and Developmental Biology of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, Prof. LI Guotian of Huazhong Agricultural University, with contributions from ...

Collaborative initiative highlights successes and challenges in global bioethics training

2025-07-23
PHILADELPHIA (July 23, 2025) – A new Penn Nursing initiative explores the impact of federally funded international bioethics training programs. The collaborative initiative, published in the Journal of Empirical Research on Human Research Ethics, highlights both the significant achievements and ongoing challenges in building bioethics research capacity in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). The collaboration, led by Connie M. Ulrich, PhD, RN, FAAN, the Lillian S. Brunner Chair in Medical and Surgical Nursing in Penn Nursing’s Department of Biobehavioral ...

A device developed at the EHU makes it simple to obtain platelet-rich plasma

2025-07-23
Platelet-rich plasma (PRP) is a fraction of blood plasma; its concentration of platelets is of great value in regenerative medicine as they are essential in accelerating healing and repairing tissue. Until now, obtaining them has been based on centrifugation techniques which, in addition to being expensive, could activate the platelets prematurely and reduce their effectiveness. “We realised that our device not only separated the plasma, but also obtained very high-quality PRP, with functional and minimally activated platelets,” explained ...

Scientists discover brain switch that controls freeze-or-flight survival instincts

2025-07-23
Scientists discover brain switch that controls freeze-or-flight survival instincts Leuven, Belgium, 23 July 2025 – Researchers have identified a key neural switch that controls whether animals instinctively flee from a threat or freeze in place. By comparing two closely related deer-mouse species, they found that this switch is calibrated by evolution to match the animal's habitat. This neural circuit is hypersensitive in mice living in densely vegetated environments, causing instant escape, but less responsive in their open-field cousins, who are more likely to freeze. In doing so, the research team uncovered an important way in which evolution fine-tunes the brain for survival. Flee ...

Complex genetic variation revealed in diverse human genomes

2025-07-23
  Genome assemblies from 65 individuals, representing a variety of the world’s populations, are advancing the scientific exploration of complex genetic structural variation. Structural variations are genetic code alterations that span more than 50 base pairs, the rungs on the DNA ladder. These changes were hard to detect until the recent advent of newer sequencing technologies and analytical algorithms, as well as larger collections of more complete, diverse genomes. Results from the latest work in this area, conducted by the Human Genome Structural Variation Consortium with participants ...

The most complete view of the human genome yet sets new standard for use in precision medicine

2025-07-23
An international team of scientists has decoded some of the most stubborn, overlooked regions of the human genome using complete sequences from 65 individuals across diverse ancestries. The study, published online today in Nature and co-led by The Jackson Laboratory (JAX), reveals how hidden DNA variations that influence everything from digestion and immune response to muscle control—and could explain why certain diseases strike some populations harder than others. This milestone builds on two foundational studies that reshaped the field of genomics. In 2022, ...

A ‘wonder’ fossil changes our understanding of reptile evolution

2025-07-23
Body coverings such as hair and feathers have played a central role in evolution. They enabled warm-bloodedness by insulating the body, and were used for courtship, display, deterrence of enemies and, in the case of feathers, flight. Their structure is characterised by longer and more complex skin outgrowths that differ significantly from the simple and flat scales of reptiles. Complex skin outgrowths have previously only been observed in mammals in the form of hair and in birds and their closest fossil relatives, dinosaurs and pterosaurs, in the form of feathers. An international team led by palaeontologists Dr Stephan Spiekman and Prof Dr Rainer Schoch from the State ...

Llama antibodies: New therapeutic avenues against schizophrenia

2025-07-23
While current treatments for schizophrenia — a mental illness affecting 1% of the world’s population — can reduce certain symptoms, they have little effect on the cognitive deficits affecting the daily life of patients. Scientists at the Institute of Functional Genomics (CNRS/Inserm/Université de Montpellier) have just designed a nanobody made from llama antibodies that can specifically activate a glutamate receptor involved in regulating neural activity. Administered peripherally via veins or muscles, this new molecule has demonstrated its capacity to break the blood-brain barrier and effectively reach brain receptors. The therapeutic effect of these nanobodies ...

The Evolution of escape

2025-07-23
The Best-Laid Plans of Mice Study shows how evolution sent deer mice scurrying down two different paths of escape   For a mouse, survival often boils down to one urgent question: flee or freeze? But the best strategy to avoid being snatched and eaten depends on which mouse you are asking. According to a new study by Harvard biologists, two closely-related species of deer mice have evolved very different responses to aerial predators thanks to tweaks in brain circuitry. One species that dwells in densely-vegetated areas instinctively darts for cover while a cousin living in open ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Dancing alleviated perceived symptoms of depression and helped to understand its root causes

Tricky treats: Why pumpkins accumulate pollutants

Revealing the molecular structures of sugars using galectin-10 protein crystals

World’s leading medical journal details the climate emergency

GLP-1 drugs effective for weight loss, but more independent studies needed

Researchers uncover previously unexplored details of mosquito’s specialized detection mechanisms

Stem cell therapy linked to lower risk of heart failure after a heart attack

The NHS is reaching a crisis point in consultant recruitment, new report warns

UNM research suggests Halloween fireballs could signal increased risk of cosmic impact or airburst in 2032 and 2036

Biochar’s hidden helper: Dissolved organic matter boosts lead removal from polluted water

Sunlight turns everyday fabrics into ocean microfibers, new study finds

Antibiotics linked to lower risk of complications after obstetric tear

Rapid blood pressure fluctuations linked to early signs of brain degeneration in older adults

How microbes control mammalian cell growth

Emergency department pilot program serves rural families

Amid renewable-energy boom, study explores options for electricity market

Study finds improvement in knee pain with exercise and physical therapy

Researchers uncover key mechanism behind chemotherapy-induced nerve damage

Mayo Clinic researchers find enhancing the body’s ‘first responder’ cells may boost immune therapy for cancer

Secret to a long life? In bowhead whales, a protein repairs damaged DNA

MIT study: Identifying kids who need help learning to read isn’t as easy as A, B, C

Plant biomass substance helps combat weeds

Veterans with epilepsy after traumatic brain injury may have higher mortality rates

Who is more likely to lose vision due to high brain pressure?

Scripps Research professor awarded $3.2 million to advance type 1 diabetes research

Anna Wuttig wins Bayer Foundation Early Excellence in Science Award

Electric vehicles outperform gasoline cars in lifetime environmental impact

Kilimanjaro has lost 75 percent of its natural plant species over the last century

Spider web “decorations” may help pinpoint location of captured prey

Ancient tombs reveal the story of Chinese history

[Press-News.org] Innovative imaging tool could improve diagnosis and treatment of hearing loss
Researchers from the Keck School of Medicine of USC have adapted a low-cost imaging method developed for ophthalmology and used it to visualize tiny structures in the human inner ear.