Hello friends
I have winged here a few times about my tinnitus and high pitched pulsatile tinnitus that I can modulate with jaw and head movements.
Previously I have had a couple of friends (around 35 years old) put their ears to my ear out of curiosity to see if they could hear what I could hear, sort of forming a compressed air-tight ear to ear connection. Both said they could hear nothing.
Today a younger friend (22 years old) listened to my ears as I moved my jaw left and right to make the tinnitus as loud as I could, to my surprise she said I can clearly hear what she described as a river sound pulsating at a high pitch. She described pretty much the noise that I can hear. Obviously her ears are much more sensitive than my slightly older friends - plus she hasn't trashed her ears!
I am guessing that with the lateral jaw movements and jaw clenching I am compressing some vessels close to the ear. Interestingly when I rotate my head left/right and then push the jaw in the same direction the sound is reduced. I can make both ears produce the noise audible to her.
Previously I thought I had somatic pulsatile tinnitus (Levine) but now that someone else can actually hear the blood flow on both sides it has me wondering if it is more to do with TMJ.
I will go and buy a small condensor microphone and insert it into my ear and connect to an amplifier to see if I can actually hear the sound.
Anyone else who has access to 'younger' ears to listen to their high pitched pulsatile tinnitus hiss might actually have a result.
Just for a side note, GP/Neuro/ENT used their stethoscopes to listen for 'bruit' type pulsatile tinnitus which is what they are trying to find, but you are talking 45+yr old ears with a much lower frequency range that can miss this high pitched pulsatile thing that quite a few people seem to have here.
I would be interested if anyone has anything similar!
I have winged here a few times about my tinnitus and high pitched pulsatile tinnitus that I can modulate with jaw and head movements.
Previously I have had a couple of friends (around 35 years old) put their ears to my ear out of curiosity to see if they could hear what I could hear, sort of forming a compressed air-tight ear to ear connection. Both said they could hear nothing.
Today a younger friend (22 years old) listened to my ears as I moved my jaw left and right to make the tinnitus as loud as I could, to my surprise she said I can clearly hear what she described as a river sound pulsating at a high pitch. She described pretty much the noise that I can hear. Obviously her ears are much more sensitive than my slightly older friends - plus she hasn't trashed her ears!
I am guessing that with the lateral jaw movements and jaw clenching I am compressing some vessels close to the ear. Interestingly when I rotate my head left/right and then push the jaw in the same direction the sound is reduced. I can make both ears produce the noise audible to her.
Previously I thought I had somatic pulsatile tinnitus (Levine) but now that someone else can actually hear the blood flow on both sides it has me wondering if it is more to do with TMJ.
I will go and buy a small condensor microphone and insert it into my ear and connect to an amplifier to see if I can actually hear the sound.
Anyone else who has access to 'younger' ears to listen to their high pitched pulsatile tinnitus hiss might actually have a result.
Just for a side note, GP/Neuro/ENT used their stethoscopes to listen for 'bruit' type pulsatile tinnitus which is what they are trying to find, but you are talking 45+yr old ears with a much lower frequency range that can miss this high pitched pulsatile thing that quite a few people seem to have here.
I would be interested if anyone has anything similar!