Oh, and lest I forget to mention it - it's fairly easy for us to distinguish between tinnitus and MD or MS. If we just have ringing and not a debilitating dizziness/nausea that usually passes in under an hour, for example. For some people tinnitus can cause anxiety and MD has been linked to anxiety as well. For others, different kinds of foods. Heck, even brain swellings and tumors can do both! High blood pressure, sodium, alcohol, caffeine, smoking - name any vice and it's likely a possible precipitating factor for MD. Loud noise exposure and head trauma top the list for both.
For me the MD sounds much different than my normal tinnitus. That won't likely be the case for everyone as my hearing loss is high, and the MD cuts out the low tones. So, to me, the tinnitus sounds like I just got my bell rung and the MD sounds like I'm surrounded by an ocean roaring in. (Or more like I'm in a whirlpool.)
I've often considered which is worse. Tinnitus or MD. You'd think MD would be the easy answer - but it passes. Tinnitus does not. I'm reminded of the old saw: "Q: why do you keep hitting yourself in the head with that hammer? A: because it feels so good when I stop!" I've had the ringing so long now that I'd love to test that idea out!
I suppose we could test the converse. Take someone on the drunken barrel ride* - then clobber them and ask which felt worse. Then keep clobbering them and ask again. Hmm - I think I have my answer after all! It wouldn't take long for them to ask to go on the drunken barrel ride again.
I hope this new post on a very old topic provides some of us with a new perspective and perhaps a chuckle or two!!
*Note: I tried for a picture of the drunken barrel ride and kept getting the wrong one. I refer to the one that spins until you are stuck to the wall and then the floor drops out and spins as well so that all your visual cues are spinning.