- Apr 18, 2013
- 1,633
- Tinnitus Since
- 2003
- Cause of Tinnitus
- Flu, Noise-induced, Jaw trauma
Hello to all.
We're going to be putting a survey together, working with some researchers, to understand more about exercise and tinnitus.
Can you please share your own experiences with me?
For me personally I've had a good uninterrupted year of the gym, going usually 5 days per week. It's coincided with just not caring about my tinnitus so much, despite it being louder (possibly due to the intensity of the exercise I do). Could be coincidence...
We're interested in:
The hypothesis is that exercise regulates cortisol, the stress hormone. Less cortisol equals less tinnitus distress. Do people who have bothersome tinnitus exercise less, feel more stress (increases in cortisol) which makes it harder to cope, thus increasing the stress response?
We're going to be putting a survey together, working with some researchers, to understand more about exercise and tinnitus.
Can you please share your own experiences with me?
For me personally I've had a good uninterrupted year of the gym, going usually 5 days per week. It's coincided with just not caring about my tinnitus so much, despite it being louder (possibly due to the intensity of the exercise I do). Could be coincidence...
We're interested in:
- How active you are
- What sort of exercise you do
- How loud your tinnitus is
- How annoying your tinnitus is
- Experience with exercise and tinnitus - does it go louder / quieter in the sort and long term, is it dependent on the type of exercise you do?
- Anything else you can tell that could help us understand more about any links
The hypothesis is that exercise regulates cortisol, the stress hormone. Less cortisol equals less tinnitus distress. Do people who have bothersome tinnitus exercise less, feel more stress (increases in cortisol) which makes it harder to cope, thus increasing the stress response?