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Western medicine/surgery has no solution for continous noice inside the ears, day and night. They say this ( tinnitus) has to be lived with!

2006-10-01 22:05:33 · 8 answers · asked by YD 5 in Health Diseases & Conditions Other - Diseases

8 answers

As someone suggested T-Gone, let me explain what that mini site is all about: http://www.t-gone.com/

Ignore it! It is only a way for making money. Once you give them your email address, they will bombard you with emails until you buy this product. Be careful and make more research.

Alternative Treatments
Some people have taken minerals such as magnesium or zinc, herbal preparations such as Ginkgo biloba, homeopathic remedies, or B vitamins for their tinnitus and found them to be helpful. Others have experienced tinnitus relief with acupuncture, cranio-sacral therapy, magnets, hyperbaric oxygen, or hypnosis. A few of these therapies have been researched in an attempt to verify the anecdotal claims. But the results have not conclusively identified these treatments as helpful for tinnitus. Your doctor might give you clearance to try them for tinnitus anyway given that they generally carry little risk to health and some people find them helpful.

Amplification (Hearing Aids)
Some tinnitus patients with hearing loss experience total or partial tinnitus relief while wearing hearing aids. There are many variables that determine success. However, if a patient has a hearing loss in the frequency range of the tinnitus, hearing aids may bring back in the ambient sounds that naturally cover the tinnitus.

Biofeedback
Biofeedback is a relaxation technique that teaches people to control certain autonomic body functions, such as pulse, muscle tension, and skin temperature. The goal of biofeedback is to help people manage stress in their lives not by reducing the stress but by changing the body’s reaction to it. Many people notice a reduction in their tinnitus when they are able to modify their reaction to the stress in their lives.

Cochlear Implants/Electrical Stimulation
A cochlear implant has two components: 1) an electrode array that is threaded into the cochlea, and 2) a receiver that is implanted just beneath the skin behind the ear. The electrode array sends electrical sound signals from the ear to the brain. Because electrode implantation destroys whatever healthy hair cells were left inside the cochlea, these implants are prescribed to deaf or near-deaf patients only. In one study, half of those who had tinnitus before their cochlear implants experienced tinnitus relief after their cochlear implants.

Why do cochlear implants help tinnitus? There are two possible reasons: 1) The tinnitus might be masked by the ambient sounds that these devices bring back in. 2) The tinnitus might be suppressed by the electrical stimulation sent through the auditory nerve by the implant. Some forms of electrical stimulation to the ear can stop tinnitus briefly.


Cognitive Therapy
Cognitive therapy is a type of counseling that is based on treating a patient's emotional reaction to tinnitus rather than the tinnitus itself. To accomplish this desired change in perception, a counselor will help the patient identify negative behaviors and thought patterns, then alter them. Counseling programs are individually designed for patients and are most effective when coupled with other tinnitus treatments, such as masking or medication.


Drug Therapy
Many drugs have been researched and used to relieve tinnitus, but there is not a drug that has been designed specifically to treat tinnitus. Some drugs that have been studied include anti-anxiety drugs like Xanax, antidepressants like nortriptyline, antihistamines, anticonvulsants like gabapentin, and even anesthetics like lidocaine. All successfully quieted tinnitus for some people.

The American Tinnitus Association cannot recommend which treatment, drug or otherwise, is right for you. This is for you and your healthcare provider to determine. Remember to talk to your provider about side effects and about other medications you currently take. Because side effects can happen with any drug or drug combination, patients have to decide for themselves if an undesirable side effect is worth the trade off of tinnitus relief.

Many people ask why pharmaceutical companies aren't actively researching a drug designed specifically for tinnitus. Partly, this is because of the cost-prohibitive nature of prescription drug development. A report in the December 2003 Wall Street Journal reported that large pharmaceutical companies spend an average of $1.7 billion to develop a new drug therapy. This price tag includes the creation of the drug, testing, approval from the Food and Drug Administration, and marketing.

Creating new drugs involves a certain level of failure. Only about one out of eight drugs tested on animals actually make it to the consumer market.

On a related topic, some drugs can actually include tinnitus as a side effect. Read more here.


Sound Therapy
Various treatment strategies use sound to decrease the loudness or prominence of tinnitus. Sound therapies include both wearable (hearing aid-like devices) and non-wearable devices (such as table-top sound machines or even a whirring fan). Often, sound is used to completely or partially cover the tinnitus. Some people refer to this covering of sound as masking. Sound therapies should always be combined with counseling.


TMJ Treatment
Tinnitus can be a symptom of a jaw joint (temporomandibular joint, or TMJ) dysfunction. This can happen because muscles and nerves in the jaw are closely connected to those in the ear and, under the right circumstances, can interfere with the ear's nerves. Dental treatment or bite realignment can help relieve TMJ pain and associated tinnitus. See your dentist if you think you have this problem.

2006-10-01 22:29:23 · answer #1 · answered by trushka 4 · 2 0

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2016-04-27 16:39:59 · answer #2 · answered by Gene 3 · 0 0

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2016-09-10 21:54:02 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

My mother used to sleep with a radio under her pillow to help distract her from her tinnitus. If it interferes with your sleep, try low level sound, quiet music--or a noise generator if music is too distracting. Learning to ignore the ringing and concentrate on other sounds is what most people do. It takes time, but it can be done.

2006-10-01 22:17:43 · answer #4 · answered by Hal 5 · 0 0

Reverse Tinnitus Fast : http://Trust.TinnitusGoGo.com/?eaVK

2016-03-27 18:57:31 · answer #5 · answered by Ann 3 · 0 0

Tienes que probar este tratamiento holístico contra el vitiligo http://vitiligo.remedios-naturales.info
En mi caso funcionó !!!

Yo sufría de vitiligo desde hace muchos años. Tenía manchas despigmentadas en todo el cuerpo con comezón ocasional. Todo esto me ha llevado a una vida muy turbulenta. Cuando por fin encontré una cura funcionamiento, no se puede imaginar la alegría que sentí. El vitiligo es ahora una cosa del pasado.

2014-12-02 06:02:21 · answer #6 · answered by ? 2 · 0 0

I've heard that playing a form of "back ground noise" in a headset will help or playing the same noise as the noise that you hear. I'm thinking about trying it since I figure that it can't get worse.

2006-10-01 22:16:44 · answer #7 · answered by Forlorn Hope 6 · 0 0

They are right.. And having a hearing aid only makes it worse.. Sorry

2006-10-01 22:07:59 · answer #8 · answered by waiting4myredemption 4 · 0 0

you are ment to play tinnitus to yourself i know it soiunds really weird but its been proven to work

2006-10-01 22:08:39 · answer #9 · answered by raeanne2710 2 · 0 0

there are a few medication options you may want to discuss with your doc. (T-Gone is one of them, there are also "maskers", like hearing aides, but they block the sound.)

2006-10-01 22:09:24 · answer #10 · answered by nurseTINA 4 · 0 0

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