- Nov 15, 2019
- 21
- 33
- Tinnitus Since
- 2018
- Cause of Tinnitus
- potentially noise-induced or somatic. ultimately unknown.
Hello everyone!
I posted here a good few months ago about my tinnitus, which has been getting worse as the months go on. And like many people here, I'm struggling to find a definitive reason for my onset and the exacerbation of it in previous months. Whilst I do think that my mental health attributes for a part of it, I did want to run a question by the forum and ask about experiences with somatic tinnitus.
My baseline is low, it's a faint "eee" sound in my left ear. But in previous months, I can now hear my baseline in my 'good' ear and I've gained a head hiss that I can't quite pin point to an exact place in my ears/head. It fluctuates greatly with my anxiety, but I've realised that I can modulate the sound with my jaw or by tucking my chin against my chest and by moving my head to the left/right and looking over my shoulder. The hiss in my head in particular, that I gained last October, raises in pitch. I do have TMJ, I frequently get jaw pain and pain in my teeth that I can't quite pin point (either impacted wisdom teeth, tooth grinding or booth). Does this sound like it could potentially be somatic tinnitus and there could be something wrong with my neck/back or something to do with muscles? I'm considering a visit back to my chiropractor after I meet with my dentist when lock down measures ease (I'm UK based, Scotland to be exact) who suggested getting a mouth guard made for sleeping.
I more or less wanted to ask about experiences with somatic tinnitus and what has worked for people here/suggestions of what kind of treatments to pursue. I definitely don't expect to get rid of tinnitus, but a mild decrease in volume would be wonderful at this point. Worth mentioning that I've seen ENT's and audiologists the past few months who find nothing wrong with the mechanics of my ears and my hearing is perfect.
I've also been wondering whether the high frequency hiss in my head could perhaps be high frequency hearing loss and whether a normal hearing test would even been able to pick that up?
I posted here a good few months ago about my tinnitus, which has been getting worse as the months go on. And like many people here, I'm struggling to find a definitive reason for my onset and the exacerbation of it in previous months. Whilst I do think that my mental health attributes for a part of it, I did want to run a question by the forum and ask about experiences with somatic tinnitus.
My baseline is low, it's a faint "eee" sound in my left ear. But in previous months, I can now hear my baseline in my 'good' ear and I've gained a head hiss that I can't quite pin point to an exact place in my ears/head. It fluctuates greatly with my anxiety, but I've realised that I can modulate the sound with my jaw or by tucking my chin against my chest and by moving my head to the left/right and looking over my shoulder. The hiss in my head in particular, that I gained last October, raises in pitch. I do have TMJ, I frequently get jaw pain and pain in my teeth that I can't quite pin point (either impacted wisdom teeth, tooth grinding or booth). Does this sound like it could potentially be somatic tinnitus and there could be something wrong with my neck/back or something to do with muscles? I'm considering a visit back to my chiropractor after I meet with my dentist when lock down measures ease (I'm UK based, Scotland to be exact) who suggested getting a mouth guard made for sleeping.
I more or less wanted to ask about experiences with somatic tinnitus and what has worked for people here/suggestions of what kind of treatments to pursue. I definitely don't expect to get rid of tinnitus, but a mild decrease in volume would be wonderful at this point. Worth mentioning that I've seen ENT's and audiologists the past few months who find nothing wrong with the mechanics of my ears and my hearing is perfect.
I've also been wondering whether the high frequency hiss in my head could perhaps be high frequency hearing loss and whether a normal hearing test would even been able to pick that up?