I have static hiss (bilaterally) and (more bothersome) low buzzing tinnitus unilaterally in my right ear.
I've been dealing with this for 13 months now but only this last week, coincidentally, I found out that when I am sitting on my office chair, and the ear is buzzing at 10/10 loudness, upon bringing my chin to my chest the buzzing goes from a 10 to a 2.
How, on earth, does tinnitus caused by an acoustic trauma allow itself to be modulated like that?
I thought tinnitus from acoustic trauma were just neurons firing like crazy, inside the brain. How then does me stretching my neck to make my chin touch my chest change anything in how my brain is producing the phantom noise?
I really don't get that part, but maybe there is a logical explanation.
I've been dealing with this for 13 months now but only this last week, coincidentally, I found out that when I am sitting on my office chair, and the ear is buzzing at 10/10 loudness, upon bringing my chin to my chest the buzzing goes from a 10 to a 2.
How, on earth, does tinnitus caused by an acoustic trauma allow itself to be modulated like that?
I thought tinnitus from acoustic trauma were just neurons firing like crazy, inside the brain. How then does me stretching my neck to make my chin touch my chest change anything in how my brain is producing the phantom noise?
I really don't get that part, but maybe there is a logical explanation.