Nope. No. And not at all.What about Gingko for hearing loss? Anyone had positive results with that?
Nope. No. And not at all.What about Gingko for hearing loss? Anyone had positive results with that?
Even though some reviews found ginkgo ineffective, this might not be the case
"In all identifed and retrieved studies using the standardized Ginkgo biloba extract, EGb 761®, this specic preparation was found to be superior to placebo in the treatment of tinnitus."
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3157487/
Ginkgold, for 1 week, 60mg
Day 6, 7 .... noticed T increase notably, while also experiencing hot fingers, toes, ears, etc, and increased pressure behind ears. Stopped taking it, and T returned to baseline after 1-2 days.
Going to say, Fail (for me)
Has anyone tried ginkgo and had any weird side effects?
try tea tree oil. I was never a big fan of all natural remedies but I got an ear infection a few months after the one that gave me T and I was so freaked out about putting ANYTHING in my ear from the pharmacy (since I"m not 100% sure if the drops they gave me for my initial infection gave me T). I tried tea tree oil and garlic and it worked great! I was just looking it up last night for hubbys ear infection and I read that it helps with skin infections as well.@Marie79 - ditto. In the middle of a painful skin condition all over my face, left it late to get antibiotics and paying for it now...
The Gingko biloba that I take @Candy is considered one of the best but whether this is true I don't know. The brand is Avogel and it is available in 50mls and 100mls bottles. It can be bought from Holland & Barrett but I have only ever seen the 50mls size in stock there which cost around £12. The 100mls is £18 or more at some outlets. I get my 100mls bottle from Amazon for £13.86 which is a bargin and have been doing that for some time. The dosage is: 15 drops 3x a day in a little water. I see no reason why it can't be taken with Citalopram but best check with your Dr to make sure.Where do you get yours in the UK? Is it the pure strength stuff people have mentioned on here?
Can I take it with Citalopram?
are you sure ginko takes months to work? I thought it generally has an immediate effect (well upon digestion/absorption) of increasing bloodflow to the peripheral extremities and such. I havent seen that it has long term effects like tonic herbs do?The Gingko biloba that I take @Candy is considered one of the best but whether this is true I don't know. The brand is Avogel and it is available in 50mls and 100mls bottles. It can be bought from Holland & Barrett but I have only ever seen the 50mls size in stock there which cost around £12. The 100mls is £18 or more at some outlets. I get my 100mls bottle from Amazon for £13.86 which is a bargin and have been doing that for some time. The dosage is: 15 drops 3x a day in a little water. I see no reason why it can't be taken with Citalopram but best check with your Dr to make sure.
Gingko biloba like other herbal medicines, St John's Wort for example, need time to build up in the body to reach full effect. Usually two to three months.
Michael
@SilverSpiral I have been told by more than one pharmacist/herbalist, that herbal medicines take time to build up in the body as they deal with the root problem. Typically 2 to 3 months to reach full effect. I was told they are not fast reacting as prescription drugs.are you sure ginko takes months to work? I thought it generally has an immediate effect (well upon digestion/absorption) of increasing bloodflow to the peripheral extremities and such. I havent seen that it has long term effects like tonic herbs do?
As a general statement that has truth to it, but it's important to realize that in both herbal medicines and prescription medicines, there are ones that work instantly and ones that take months to work. For instance, SSRIs are well known to take months to reach full effect (the efficacy of ssris in general is another issue though...) , whereas eating some coffee beans, or taking a high potency B complex vitamin, or ingesting cannabis, will have fairly immediate effects. (not comparing those to ssri's just using the example of the prescription med i can think of that takes longest to work, versus the fastest acting "herbal ones")@SilverSpiral I have been told by more than one pharmacist/herbalist, that herbal medicines take time to build up in the body as they deal with the root problem. Typically 2 to 3 months to reach full effect. I was told they are not fast reacting as prescription drugs.
Michael
As a general statement that has truth to it, but it's important to realize that in both herbal medicines and prescription medicines, there are ones that work instantly and ones that take months to work. For instance, SSRIs are well known to take months to reach full effect (the efficacy of ssris in general is another issue though...) , whereas eating some coffee beans, or taking a high potency B complex vitamin, or ingesting cannabis, will have fairly immediate effects.
Taking vitamin C has some immediate effects on the immune system, but if you were taking it to cure scurvy, it would take a while for it to actually treat that condition.
Tonic mushrooms like Reishi and Chaga have both short term effects, and long term effects.
I have noticed in some cases that I've gotten the impression that herbal suppliers may use the "this takes 3-6 months to work"..."yeah that does too" may be used to sell more product...
No problem, I also edited my post to clear things up and give more personal experience I have. I of course have no expertise on this information, just my personal experience and viewpoints based on online research/reading books.Thank you so much for the information SilverSpiral for I have learnt something.
All the best
Michael
If it actually heals the neurons, or hair cells, or whatever in the ear, then it may very well be a long term thing, but I'm not able to find any hard writing on the effect ginkgo biloba has on tinnitus. EDIT: I'm still taking Ginkgo Biloba twice a day and hoping for a miracle though!
Michael,@Coyotesheaven I have been talking Ginkgo Biloba for a number of years... I have quite severe tinnitus...
I've been taking high amounts of high grade standardized Ginkgo Biloba, and have noticed no positive effects, if anything, after taking it I notice a spike, which I view as possibly positive, as it may indicate that increase circulation and nutrients are reaching the middle ear. Yet you have been taking Gingko and believe it has improved your hearing and tinnitus specifically.@Blujay
HI Blujay. Before 2008 my tinnitus was very low and at times I hardly noticed it. After the noise exposure in 2008 my tinnitus ranged from: silent, mild, moderate, severe and very severe. I no longer reaches very severe levels and I continue to take Gingko Biloba in tincture form the brand Avogel. I feel the Gingko has improved my hearing and tinnitus.
Michael
Definitely probably. Without knowing the nature of your b-complex (since you can overdose in certain b vitamins, I think b-6 is the one most dangerous of overdose, ironically of course, b-6 is one of the ones most heralded for tinnitus recovery, so what are you gonna do in that case, take your chances I guess). The B-12 supplement in addition to the b complex may be redundant depending on the dose present in the b-complex, and they do caution against using several thousand IUs of b-12 without doctor diagnosed deficiency, but generally you just piss out the excess. In people with B12 deficiency they will inject 10s of thousand IUs at once, since b12 gets stored in the liver. Your supplement intake is less than many "healthy" people without "conditions" take daily, though the whole health supplement market and efficacy is a debate in itself. Magnesium supplement is fine, judging by that you say "1x" magnesium is pretty safe its probably well under a gram, and you'd get very chronic diahrea with excess magnesium long before you had to worry about damaging your kidneys with it.At the moment I'm currently taking
-1 x 600mg NAC
-1 x 600mg B-Complex(Pharmaton)
-1 x Vit B12
-1 x Magnesium Citrate
Is all this safe to take together?
Anyone post me a link to this Ginko or whatever you call it,a link to where I can order some of high quality?
I've been taking high amounts of high grade standardized Ginkgo Biloba, and have noticed no positive effects, if anything, after taking it I notice a spike, which I view as possibly positive, as it may indicate that increase circulation and nutrients are reaching the middle ear.
I'm not sure to be honest, but at least 3 months. I'm quite sure the stuff I have is the same standardization as Tebonin. Try to find out what "Ginkgold" and "EGB 761" are. I am quite sure they are just proprietary labels for the same standardization of gingo biloba.How long have you been taking it?