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Last June I took a plane trip. My ears popped really badly when the plane landed and I was having a lot of pain for two months. I went to the doctor and he prescribed Nasonex, but it didn't help. This used to affect both ears but is now only bothering my right. When I keep my mouth closed and move my jaw, or open my mouth, there is a strange noise. Sometimes it sounds like a pop (similar to the kind that happens when water comes out of your ear after a shower) and sometimes its like a weird muffled grating noise. Occasionally I have a sharp pain in that area. Until a month ago, they would also pop on thier own, without my moving my jaw. Does anyone know what this is?

2007-03-10 12:19:08 · 2 answers · asked by Anonymous in Health Dental

2 answers

A friend of mine had TMJ for years and tried Coral Calcium and in a few weeks it was gone.

Perhaps you have a mineral deficiency.

You should also try seaweed.

If you use table salt, I would quit and switch to unrefined sea salt. Sea Salt has almost the identical mineral composition as blood.

Give those a shot and also consider increasing water consumption but not tap water. Your body may be having a reaction to chlorine and fluoride that often in tap water.

Remineralized distilled water is a great way to get minerals.Get three big glass gallon jugs of apple juice and after you finish the juice start buying distilled water and add 12 grains of unrefined brown rice to each jug. This will re-mineralize the water. Rotate the water and as you finish one jug, add the rice a rotate to the jug that had the rice in for the longest period of time.

Our bodies want to heal but we are so cut off from our instincts that we fail to eat the food our body is telling us it needs. These changes will give you a wide variety of minerals and what your body doesn't need it will flush.

2007-03-10 14:29:43 · answer #1 · answered by rudenski 5 · 0 0

It does sound like it's possibly a problem with your TMJ not really related to your plane trip. I would recommend seeing a TMJ specialist though honestly there is little to none that can be done for most cases. You can try splints, sometimes they work. Advil or anti-inflammitories help but this is a touchy area that is very difficult to manage. Do your research, talk to people with this problem & find a GREAT TMJ Dentist.

2007-03-10 12:30:11 · answer #2 · answered by luvlemons 2 · 0 0

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