- May 17, 2017
- 909
- Tinnitus Since
- 07/2016
- Cause of Tinnitus
- Ototoxic earwax drops, worsened by MDs (Muppet Doctors)
It's a very low frequency bass hum and often modulates with my heart beat, sometimes it's just constant. Sounds a bit like a tumble dryer off in the distance. My eyes sometimes flicker a bit too, which I think is some crosstalk with the optic nerve. When it's not as intense it's just not as noticeable. It has become 24/7 this year and is in another worse phase since a few days ago. When it's not too bad, I've noticed at night when I sometimes wake up it's barely there. When it's like that I don't really even think about it much these days. Either way it doesn't elicit an emotional response anymore.What does yours sound like? Do you hear and feel something as well? Is it a vibration type bass echo that can shift from being a pure non-pause rumble if it's bad, and more of a pause in between each type of rumble when it's not as intense? Is it 24/7, or most of the day off and on? Have you seen anyone to identify what exactly is vibrating in the ear?
What have you read makes you believe that it can become ingrained into the nervous system and become autonomous? There's a lot of different things that can screw up in the body, and many can resolve it and it goes away, so I don't think it's likely that it just happens and then gets stuck doing what it's doing. Underneath it all, there has to be a cause for the effect.
When my tensor tympani cramps I get another sound which is a low tone, but higher than the hum one, but that's just due to conductive hearing loss as a result it not conducting sound correctly.
https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fneur.2017.00420/full
This mentions how the trigeminal nerve can become activated and sensitised.
I personally wouldn't waste money on an ENT or neurologist for this. None have helped me. My neck is not good, so I might go and see an upper cervical chiropractor. That link you posted before mentions the C spine being out of whack as a possible cause. I do get a sensation of cold water dripping down my arm several times a day. Who knows it might help, but I do know that it started as a result of acoustic shock and it does react to sound.
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