Hi
@JLP,
Yeah, mine seems to fluctuate the most with sleep. Sometimes I wake up and it's mellow, and other days I wake up and it's loud. Sleep seems to reset it with me -- weird. I have had MRIs, CT but nothing shows up. I've tried physical therapy (because of whiplash), TENS units, and seen ENT, neurologist, and eventually a neurotologist. I tried reading medical articles online. I finally concluded that it is just a brain thing. I have come to realize how much the perception of sound is reliant on the brain. Kind of like why some people hear Yanny and others hear Laurel -- when the brain isn't able to figure it out, it just takes a best guess.
Out of all the articles that I read, this study from Michigan seems to fit my type of tinnitus -- the kind that fluctuates due to brain injury, and can be modulated. The study itself is promising, but what I like most about the article is how it explains fusiform cells. I do take these studies with a grain of salt, because there are many studies that claim to relieve tinnitus, but I have not seen it.
https://news.umich.edu/specially-ti...toms-in-test-aimed-at-condition-s-root-cause/
Because I am a computer programmer, tinnitus can break my concentration if I don't have external sounds to distract me from it. I listen to techno ambient music (or Call of Duty gamer music) when I code, and really like it. It makes me feel like I'm saving the world -- haha. It helps me a lot:
I like this guy Aes Dana:
I would also add that this is all part of life. Stuff is going to happen along the way. We don't leave this world with perfect eyesight, hearing, knees, full head of hair, and allergy-free. There will be some things like tinnitus that you may not be able to fix -- or who knows, with the pace of innovation these days, just maybe -- but I prefer to focus on the things that I can change by hitting the gym and staying in shape. And tinnitus is definitely one of those things that just becomes a part of you after time -- so just go with it