I guess nobody will mind when I say: what on earth is this all about? Severe 10-year-old tinnitus caused by acoustic trauma practically cured by dripping lukewarm mint tea in your ear?
I guess we all agree this could maybe potentially only do something for an ear infection... not for an actual tinnitus that is due to broken synapses, ingrained in the brain - type of situation.
Haven't really felt any need to rain on this parade, because, well, like
@Matchbox said, experimenting with this potential "treatment" is unlikely to do anyone any harm.
We've got the weird
Tinnitus Mix thread still going, which may actually worsen some of those who try it. So in comparison,
@arctic_penguin's suggestion is about as risky as telling people to try prayer.
Also, I'm always open to being proven wrong despite my preconceptions. I don't believe aliens are visiting or flying around earth for example. But if tomorrow the Empire State Building gets vaporised, or the MIB try to recruit me with "Alien Tinnitus Cure" covered in the health insurance plan, then call me a believer.
That said, I don't see this working for anyone (except, apparently, the OP). Reasons being:
1) Mint tea has no regenerative properties. I suppose it
does have purported anti-inflammatory properties. But assuming the (one) theory (of many) that tinnitus is as the result of "bent", instead of
dead, CHCs, and anti-inflammatory medications applied
directly to the cochlear remedied that problem; dropping said medication (or tea...) down an ear canal with an intact tympanic membrane, is
not going to reach those hair cells. Hence why most of the modern regenerative medicines that are being trialled are intratympanically delivered.
2) If any anti-inflammatory medication did miraculously make it past the tympanic membrane, or in some non-existent medical procedure,
was directly applied to the cochlear, it would still have a lesser effect compared to a regenerative medicine. Or more succinctly put: a regenerative medicine would fix the problems an anti-inflammatory medication would
and more. But, seeing as to date results involving
FX-322 have been underwhelming, I think we can safely assume mint tea isn't going to help us resume our full-lives any time soon, unless indigestion is what's stopping you from resuming a full life...
May as well just stick an Ibuprofen in your ear and hope for the best.
Pleased you're doing so much better though
@arctic_penguin, you seem like a cool guy.