Tinnitus

Posted by buddysmom07 @buddysmom07, Oct 2, 2023

I’ve had tinnitus since 1995 and nothing has ever helped! Mine was a traumatic injury and I have hearing aids they don’t help tinnitus but I can hear a little better! I’ve been taking lipoflavinoid for 2 years and it doesn’t help either! I play soft music to help with sleep but mine is constant buzzing like locusts! Any suggestions please?

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@bettersleep68

They always want to refer you to an audiologist....it is not the ear.....it is the brain that causes tinnitus!!!!! No help from anyone because it cannot be treated ....

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I know tinnitus stems from the brain. I watched a 45 minute video on it and it's the mis communication between the ear and the brain due to constant exposure or medical issues that cause the silica in the ear to not process sound efficiently so the brain is getting mixed signals from sound it is trying to sort out. I only said I needed to see an audiologist or an ENT to make sure it isn't something else that is causing it. I've done extensive research, trust me. In fact, my neurologist also told me I could see an audiologist if I wanted to but there was nothing they could do to fix it. If it's something else like wax, something that can be fixed surgically like a growth, tumor or if it's injury to ear drum at least I'd know what was causing it. I've never had one refer me to an audiologist, it's been my idea to see one then they tell me what they think. The drainage I get every now and then that feels like sand in my ear certainly isn't coming from my brain.

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There are audiologists who have tinnitus programs. There is no cure but they help with masking and for some, hearing aids help.

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Widex Zen, Tinnitus Management i App Store (apple.com)

Widex, a manufacturer or hearing aids located in Denmark, received the award for innovation related to tinnitus at a world wide conference . There is some interesting data, along with access to what other hearing instrument manufacturers are doing relative to tinnitus.
https://apps.apple.com/us/app/widex-zen-tinnitus-management/id1195907597?l=da
There is interesting information at this link about how hearing aid manufacturers are developing apps that help mask tinnitus. Scroll down to the bottom of the article for information about a variety of hearing aid manufacturers who are working on this.

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@carol1024

I have tinnitus that has gotten progressively worse in the last few months. It sounds like the squealing sounds from powerlines. I was desperate and ordered Cortexi ($177) for 3 bottles. I've only been using it a few days. I also take the lipoflavonoid for ringing in the ears. Some days are worse than others. Although it affects the ears, tinnitus actually comes from the brain. It has something to do with the part of the brain that processes hearing...over years of listening to loud noises, it does something to that part of the brain and the sounds become all jumbled up and squiggly and can't make the connection to the part of the brain to decipher it. It was an interesting video and made sense. I have been a stylist for 30 years so I have listened to blowdryers daily. I researched decibels once too. The product I ordered is all natural and meant to increase blood flow and to repair the neurons damaged in the brain responsible for hearing. I was desperate. I guess my next step will be audiologist. I know someone so desperate they had the nerve cut in the ear and the tinnitus got worse. I'm wondering if it's a blood flow issue, would regular exercise work because that increases blood flow too. That may just be my motivation to start using my treadmill. At times I can tune it out, almost like when you first get an aquarium and all you hear is running water but over time, you stop noticing it. I just know that there have been people that committed suicide because it became so unbearable. There has to be an answer. PLEASE somebody give me some good, hopeful news.

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I cannot tell if you've had responses.and I want to say may God bless you and comfort you. Did you look at your chemotherapy drugs? My husband was on a chemotherapy drug Cisplatin at a higher dose and he had the ringing of the ears and it was pretty bad… So they lowered the dose twice, and the ringing stopped.

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@westand731

I cannot tell if you've had responses.and I want to say may God bless you and comfort you. Did you look at your chemotherapy drugs? My husband was on a chemotherapy drug Cisplatin at a higher dose and he had the ringing of the ears and it was pretty bad… So they lowered the dose twice, and the ringing stopped.

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Never been on chemotherapy drugs. I do have vertigo and have had it for 40+ years. I have inner ear problems and a lot of sinus infections that require antibiotics. That's the main reason I need to see ENT because of vertigo.

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@julieo4

Widex Zen, Tinnitus Management i App Store (apple.com)

Widex, a manufacturer or hearing aids located in Denmark, received the award for innovation related to tinnitus at a world wide conference . There is some interesting data, along with access to what other hearing instrument manufacturers are doing relative to tinnitus.
https://apps.apple.com/us/app/widex-zen-tinnitus-management/id1195907597?l=da
There is interesting information at this link about how hearing aid manufacturers are developing apps that help mask tinnitus. Scroll down to the bottom of the article for information about a variety of hearing aid manufacturers who are working on this.

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I read an article on this too.

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@windyshores

There are audiologists who have tinnitus programs. There is no cure but they help with masking and for some, hearing aids help.

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I think one day there will be a cure when they can figure out the receptors in the brain that is having a hard time figuring out what to do with the misinformation of sound. It's similar to a station that doesn't come in clearly but you keep adjusting and soon the signal is clear and you can make sense of the words on the radio. The part of the brain responsible for processing the sounds is getting interference and it doesn't know what to do with the noise. It doesn't know how to process it. It's really complex and since so many people suffer from it, it's only a matter of time before they get it figured out.

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@carol1024

I think one day there will be a cure when they can figure out the receptors in the brain that is having a hard time figuring out what to do with the misinformation of sound. It's similar to a station that doesn't come in clearly but you keep adjusting and soon the signal is clear and you can make sense of the words on the radio. The part of the brain responsible for processing the sounds is getting interference and it doesn't know what to do with the noise. It doesn't know how to process it. It's really complex and since so many people suffer from it, it's only a matter of time before they get it figured out.

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Noise exposure is commonly known as a cause of tinnitus. Both hearing loss and tinnitus are the most common disabilities experienced by military personnel returning from combat zones. Most often they come together, but not always as one or the other can happen alone.

It's important to use protective ear plugs when in extreme noise. That includes when pursuing recreational activities like hunting and attending live sports & musical events. Tinnitus and hearing loss caused by extreme noise are both becoming more common. Important to understand that this causative factor is likely the only one that can be managed easily.

We often attend NFL games. Fortunately, our team plays in an outdoor stadium, so the noise is a bit less than in an indoor stadium. It is sad to attend a game in an indoor stadium where the announcers on the 'big screens' are running decibel meters and encouraging the crowd to make it louder. Anything over 85 dBs is dangerous to hearing. Sometimes the dB meter at those stadiums goes up over 130 dBs. Not good. Wear ear protection to the games!

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I have had various degrees of tinnitus for 7? maybe years? The ? indicates that it is currently not very intense, and/or I have adjusted to it, or my general hearing is getting so bad that I don’t “hear” it anymore? That’s unlikely. Anyway, yes, I know it originates in the brain, and yes, I know it’s often caused by prolonged noise exposure. Mine (never had earbuds, never had a boom box - yes, that old) most noise causes would be vacuum cleaner or hairdryer, neither of which I use for hours. Especially the vacuum cleaner. Humor aside, I wanted to share my somewhat unusual road to tinnitus. Following timeline accordingly 7+ years.
Came back from 9+ hour overseas flight, had routine Dr.’s appointment about 10 days later. I always get somewhat stuffy ears on long flights due to pressure changes, so doc saw excess ear wax. Nurse proceeded to (quite roughly, I thought) flush both ears. 2 nights later I had the ocean cresting in my bedroom/ears. Really loud. As if you’re on an angry beach. Tried to ignore, tried to read to exhaustion, tried to run fan - no help. Eventually I did get some nights of sleep simply because one has to sleep. And then very gradually the whooshing got softer, until by May (started late January) it had faded away. Yeah!
But no. Next year, same time, overseas flight TO Europe - all good. Nice Hotel. Snowy night. Window open. And crickets. ???? Snowy nights are known for absolute silence. Not crickets. So - tinnitius 2.0 . Still same sort of thing today. In total silence just a really irritating high-pitched hum. Normal every-day life bearable. But I will never, ever, again, experience the dead silence of a snowy winter’s night.
End of essay.

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I know .. my tinnitus is those noisy crickets...I wish for silence but after 30plus years . Never no silence...it is a shame our doctors cannot help us .....

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