Yeah, been to Cleveland Clinic myself and it was a wasted trip for me also. It was kinda like a cattle call. I had a 10 am appointment. I was still waiting at 1 pm and finally decided to just leave. The doctor called me at home at about 6 pm that evening to apologize. He said they were just really busy that day. I am not going back!yes we aren't to far apart. and I used to chew gum, but stopped about when all of this started, yes its bad enough to have tinnitus but also neck pain with it, I have been in PT 4 different times but its still there.. I even went to Cleveland clinic and it was a wasted trip..
I had no idea that they have a "T" Clinic! Do you know if insurance pays for any of the costs involved? If not, it seems like it would be a huge waste of my money! I don't mind wasting insurance company money, but not my own.David, did you know the Cleveland clinic has a tinnitus clinic? I called before and you went in as a group, and they let you spend like 10 minutes with each doctor then you pay im thinking 400 dollars... ? then I guess if you need sound therapy or whatever you can do that with extra money of course.. I didn't go but in desperation called about it.
I'm sure you weren't trying to be snarky, but you're being pretty dismissive of a real and interesting thing which does seem like it might well be related to tinnitus in some cases.O.K........back to the original point of this thread;
Just what is "sensitization of the central nervous system"????
Did someone make it up? Is it a real diagnosis? Is it somebody's way of explaining away "T"?
sensitization of the central nervous system....com'on
Maladaptive neuroplastic changes and reduced inhibition have long been called out as tinnitus culprits.Central sensitization represents an enhancement in the function of neurons and circuits in nociceptive pathways caused by increases in membrane excitability and synaptic efficacy as well as to reduced inhibition and is a manifestation of the remarkable plasticity of the somatosensory nervous system in response to activity, inflammation, and neural injury.
Yes, I was being snarky. I am sorry, but I am just a little bit skeptical. There are a million unfounded theories out there. Theories are a dime a dozen. This one sounds legitimate (if you can really understand it), but until it can be practically applied in developing a viable treatment, it is just another theory!I'm sure you weren't trying to be snarky, but you're being pretty dismissive of a real and interesting thing which does seem like it might well be related to tinnitus in some cases.
Yes, I certainly agree with you on that. However, don't hold your breath while waiting for a better understanding of the related neurology........Yeah, unfortunately this seems to be process understanding without (yet, anyway) any intelligent ideas about how to arrest it.
I'm getting increasingly pessimistic of drug cures, because drugs are so systemic, even if you can effect the change you want at the receptors you want in the brain structure you want to alter, there are always other effects other places. But, hopefully a better understanding of neurology will, over time, lead the way to more targeted, specific therapies.
On the one hand, I don't assume that a cure is near at hand, or live my life in the shadow of that idea -- at least, not anymore than I hold out hope that I won't suffer the same dementia my grandmother did, or any other fear like that.
On the other hand, I don't think there's any reason to be pessimistic. They can literally map the tinnitus signal arcing through various brain structures in a live human with fMRI now. That's pretty amazing, and would have seemed like impossible futuretech as recently as 25 years ago.
I have frustrating tinnitus that has a cyclical nature to it, and I suppose that I have other things that are basically fibro symptoms which are also cyclical (trigger points, tension probs especially head/jaw, some exercise intolerance, etc).
I will say that when my T is bad, it is not in isolation of everything else: my whole head feels like a too-tight guitar string.
I just found this, which is dense but may be of interest:
https://ftp.utdallas.edu/~amoller/publications/344.pdf
It's a research paper, "Similarities between chronic pain and tinnitus".
years of unmanaged stress, drugs, concerts? Being a premature baby and having a super sensitive CNS? It's hard to say.Any idea what set all this off?
years of unmanaged stress, drugs, concerts? Being a premature baby and having a super sensitive CNS? It's hard to say.
Gotcha.
FYI I'm looking into taking Lithium Orotate to calm down my CNS.
someone on a benzo board I read said their (withdrawal-caused) tinnitus got much better after a fairly extreme neurontin dosing regimen... but if you look around the internet you can also find plenty of people who say neurontin caused tinnitus, so....would neurotin help with this?(CNS)
I certainly agree with getting your mind unstuck. However, I don't think it is wise to be in either your mind or body. Dealing seems to work best when we get completely out of ourselves. I can speak for myself only. I have found that when I am heavily occupied (by work or play) the "T" is not an issue. It doesn't go away, but I don't hear it. It is only when I plop down in front of the T.V. or relax in a quiet room that it becomes an issue.I do believe that my reaction to my T will be better if I can just get my mind unstuck and "be in my body" more. I am also back to doing guided meditations.