- May 16, 2017
- 3,754
- Tinnitus Since
- 04/2011
- Cause of Tinnitus
- Syringing + Somatic tinnitus from dental work
@SecretDoubleCat
My thoughts - maybe - not sure - but possible
It may be that the substance didn't increased tinnitus as there's no obvious hearing loss.
The substance taken could have increased nervous activity to the muscles and nerves of your back teeth by strong clenching. You may already had a nerve situation from any dental work on back teeth. This clenching can increase pressure to your C1 and in return the C1 can then add pressure to joints in the back of your jaw. The C1 and jaw joints have a hinging effect where it leads to the skull.
Discussion with your dentist: A 3D cone beam exam, but maybe a jaw MRI instead. A mouth guard made by your dentist that doesn't cover back teeth. Discuss a semi hard guard.
I would consider some magnesium/chelate that will support nerve and muscle function. I use this at times - one 100 mg tablet a day. Research this and B12.
I would get your side to side body height measured by a physical therapist. Or stand in front of a wall mirror and see if one shoulder is noticeably lower than the other. If so, discuss with your GP a X ray of C spine.
It is possible that the nerves from your jaw to ears were weak from clenching and/or noise over the years and then the substance taken increased tinnitus.
If you can control clenching with a mouth guard, use proper posture and with time your increased tinnitus may settle back down. One reason why I mention posture is that the jaw and C spine hates bad posture habits.
My thoughts - maybe - not sure - but possible
It may be that the substance didn't increased tinnitus as there's no obvious hearing loss.
The substance taken could have increased nervous activity to the muscles and nerves of your back teeth by strong clenching. You may already had a nerve situation from any dental work on back teeth. This clenching can increase pressure to your C1 and in return the C1 can then add pressure to joints in the back of your jaw. The C1 and jaw joints have a hinging effect where it leads to the skull.
Discussion with your dentist: A 3D cone beam exam, but maybe a jaw MRI instead. A mouth guard made by your dentist that doesn't cover back teeth. Discuss a semi hard guard.
I would consider some magnesium/chelate that will support nerve and muscle function. I use this at times - one 100 mg tablet a day. Research this and B12.
I would get your side to side body height measured by a physical therapist. Or stand in front of a wall mirror and see if one shoulder is noticeably lower than the other. If so, discuss with your GP a X ray of C spine.
It is possible that the nerves from your jaw to ears were weak from clenching and/or noise over the years and then the substance taken increased tinnitus.
If you can control clenching with a mouth guard, use proper posture and with time your increased tinnitus may settle back down. One reason why I mention posture is that the jaw and C spine hates bad posture habits.