Firstly, I want to shout out to @Greg Sacramento who has made the single best contribution to my well-being through this forum. In fact I would say Greg listened more than specialists and doctors.
I am sure that we are half-a planet away from each other, but Greg provided the right support when I most needed it. See below for the discussion that changed my life.
Now, what am I talking about? If you have picked up on my posts, then you will know what is going on. But recently I re-tried Greg's information and advice. I have tinnitus in (mostly) my left side: a high hissing noise (cicadas, crickets, shrill hissing, etc), but not a "tone".
In the past sometimes my tinnitus has gone from my self-assessed 4/5 down to 1/5 (1 is faint, 4 is loud, and 5 is I-dont-wanna-know). For almost two years now I have not had an extended period of 1-level days. I had enjoyed a 9 day stretch in the past that I have never been able to repeat, and things have been getting so bad that I could not remember the last time that good things happened for me. I used to, in hope of recovery, track my tinnitus everyday. I tracked it for a few years hoping for a pattern that would explain it. And then eventually I gave up on doing this because there were no "good" days and filling out that tracking register was going to be super-easy because it would be 4's forever. Recently life has been #$%^.
But after re-assessing my life and my emotions and frame of mind, I went back to this forum and I re-read my posts and the always-helpful, always-generous advice from others.
Short: you guys are awesome, and please don't stop being awesome.
So what happened?
Recently I "declicked" my neck - as Greg would say the C1/C2 vertebrae etc. But I am guessing.
I was brushing my teeth and I convulsed on the toothbrush (sorry for the TMI but I want to tell you the thing that did it). So I gagged and the gag reflex took over. And something clicked in my neck. Almost instantly the tinnitus was gone. It was quick. By the time I was catching up on what just happened I noticed that the tinnitus was gone.
But then it came back after 1 day. Oh well. Back to level 4 days and nights.
Until Friday when I woke up and it was gone. And my neck felt different - a little bit like something had "settled" and worked itself out. So for four days now my tinnitus has been at a 1 or a 0.1. It is really low. So low that I am right now struggling to hear any tinnitus.
And now I am super mindful of my posture. Neck positions, shoulder lifting, desk leaning, etc. I don't want to go back to where I was.
But I am at the place where I used to be. Where the tinnitus rises when I clench my teeth or hiccup in a funny way or crunch my core muscles. And the sound would go "weee-ooo". I am back at that place now. That is my 1/5 level that I had before.
So I plan to beat my previous 9 day record at this level, and then some.
Thanks again to @Greg Sacramento for the kick in the pants I needed, especially when I cam back here after two years with nothing to show for it, and I came back for a re-kicking.
I bet you have questions. I will see if I can answer.
Cheers.
I am sure that we are half-a planet away from each other, but Greg provided the right support when I most needed it. See below for the discussion that changed my life.
Now, what am I talking about? If you have picked up on my posts, then you will know what is going on. But recently I re-tried Greg's information and advice. I have tinnitus in (mostly) my left side: a high hissing noise (cicadas, crickets, shrill hissing, etc), but not a "tone".
In the past sometimes my tinnitus has gone from my self-assessed 4/5 down to 1/5 (1 is faint, 4 is loud, and 5 is I-dont-wanna-know). For almost two years now I have not had an extended period of 1-level days. I had enjoyed a 9 day stretch in the past that I have never been able to repeat, and things have been getting so bad that I could not remember the last time that good things happened for me. I used to, in hope of recovery, track my tinnitus everyday. I tracked it for a few years hoping for a pattern that would explain it. And then eventually I gave up on doing this because there were no "good" days and filling out that tracking register was going to be super-easy because it would be 4's forever. Recently life has been #$%^.
But after re-assessing my life and my emotions and frame of mind, I went back to this forum and I re-read my posts and the always-helpful, always-generous advice from others.
Short: you guys are awesome, and please don't stop being awesome.
So what happened?
Recently I "declicked" my neck - as Greg would say the C1/C2 vertebrae etc. But I am guessing.
I was brushing my teeth and I convulsed on the toothbrush (sorry for the TMI but I want to tell you the thing that did it). So I gagged and the gag reflex took over. And something clicked in my neck. Almost instantly the tinnitus was gone. It was quick. By the time I was catching up on what just happened I noticed that the tinnitus was gone.
But then it came back after 1 day. Oh well. Back to level 4 days and nights.
Until Friday when I woke up and it was gone. And my neck felt different - a little bit like something had "settled" and worked itself out. So for four days now my tinnitus has been at a 1 or a 0.1. It is really low. So low that I am right now struggling to hear any tinnitus.
And now I am super mindful of my posture. Neck positions, shoulder lifting, desk leaning, etc. I don't want to go back to where I was.
But I am at the place where I used to be. Where the tinnitus rises when I clench my teeth or hiccup in a funny way or crunch my core muscles. And the sound would go "weee-ooo". I am back at that place now. That is my 1/5 level that I had before.
So I plan to beat my previous 9 day record at this level, and then some.
Thanks again to @Greg Sacramento for the kick in the pants I needed, especially when I cam back here after two years with nothing to show for it, and I came back for a re-kicking.
I bet you have questions. I will see if I can answer.
Cheers.
From all the studies that I have read, I think the quotes from attained 'link below' for physical associated 'tinnitus changing' are most common. Extreme forward head bending and hyper extension (lifting) of head is a common trigger that's not fully discussed in this article. As far as any strange sounds being heard, researchers point to brain reactions, but they are still all over the place with this.
"Although passive and active movements of the neck and shoulder modulated the perception of tinnitus in many subjects, forceful maneuvers were clearly more effective. It is unclear why this is the case, but one possible explanation is that forceful maneuvers unconsciously activate other neural networks involved in breath-holding and flexion of the abdominal muscles, similar to what occurs during the Valsalva maneuver, which increases intracranial pressure and venous return to the heart as well as normalizing middle ear pressure by opening the eustachian tube."
"Our results lend support to previous contentions that movements of the jaw and neck (involving the trigeminal nerve, spinal accessory nerve, and cervical nerves 1 and 2) are the most consistent and most efficacious methods of modulating tinnitus."
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2633109/