Scientists tout major implications for treatment of humans with world-first study
Scientists have made a major breakthrough in the cure for deafness by restoring the hearing of deaf gerbils using human stem cells.
The technique, which is the first to use stem cells to treat deafness, could one day benefit hundreds of thousands of sufferers.
Researchers from the University of Sheffield were able to turn human embryonic stem cells into ear cells, which were then transplanted into the inner ear of gerbils that had been made deaf. On average, the deaf gerbils' hearing improved by 46 per cent, which in a human would mean the difference between not hearing a truck passing by, and being able to conduct a conversation at an indoor volume, the researchers said.
The gerbils, which were used because of the similarity between their hearing range and that of humans, underwent chemically-induced damage to one ear. Around 50,000 inner ear nerve cells were then implanted via a small incision behind the ear and a hole drilled into the base of the cochlea.