Lidocaine Temporarily Diminished My Tinnitus

KingRoanoke

Member
Author
May 2, 2014
48
Tinnitus Since
2008
Cause of Tinnitus
Look at what the dog is wearing.
This was a very bizarre experience. I went to the dentist for a root canal. I was very resistant to the initial injection of lidocaine as I was feeling pain during the surgery. The dentist eventually injected my jaw with a lot of Lidocaine - much more than he initially thought was needed. And my T seemed....gone. As I was leaving I couldn't hear my T at all. It could have been there, but at a lower level - I didn't hear it though. I later went online and checked and it seems this is a strange phenomenon.

Are currently researched treatments for T looking at Lidocaine's potential mechanism of action?

Pretty cool that there actually is a thing like this, though! Not cool enough for me to go to the dentist more often, though. Hence the root canal.... :/
 
This was a very bizarre experience. I went to the dentist for a root canal. I was very resistant to the initial injection of lidocaine as I was feeling pain during the surgery. The dentist eventually injected my jaw with a lot of Lidocaine - much more than he initially thought was needed. And my T seemed....gone. As I was leaving I couldn't hear my T at all. It could have been there, but at a lower level - I didn't hear it though. I later went online and checked and it seems this is a strange phenomenon.

Are currently researched treatments for T looking at Lidocaine's potential mechanism of action?

Pretty cool that there actually is a thing like this, though! Not cool enough for me to go to the dentist more often, though. Hence the root canal.... :/
interesting that you posted this today... this is the avenue that should have been explored 20 years ago as this phenomenon with lidocaine has been documented for awhile now-- lidocaine is a calcium channel blocker- and some potassium channels open in response to calcium- calcium channels close-then pottasium channels close-- hence the effect on T- or the hypothesized effect--- 20 years later and how much research has been done regarding this-- basically none until just the past few years--- sad
 
This was a very bizarre experience. I went to the dentist for a root canal. I was very resistant to the initial injection of lidocaine as I was feeling pain during the surgery. The dentist eventually injected my jaw with a lot of Lidocaine - much more than he initially thought was needed. And my T seemed....gone. As I was leaving I couldn't hear my T at all. It could have been there, but at a lower level - I didn't hear it though. I later went online and checked and it seems this is a strange phenomenon.

Are currently researched treatments for T looking at Lidocaine's potential mechanism of action?

Pretty cool that there actually is a thing like this, though! Not cool enough for me to go to the dentist more often, though. Hence the root canal.... :/

This is VERY interesting! I think its related to the lateral pterygoideus. Im going to have this muscle injected in a couple of days. I think this muscle is a killer and is able to generate tinnitus all by its own..
 
Ironic that I saw this just now, I notice that if I turn my head to extreme right my tinnitus is extremely lower. Also have had dental work with lots of lidocaine in the past weeks and noticed I felt human again. t seemed gone briefly.
 
They sell lidocane skin patches. However, lidocane is ototoxic, so I don't think I will be using those patches...
 
No one cares enough to find the actual mechanism of how Lidocaine stops tinnitus, as it's an older drug before they had to find silly things like binding affinities. Since it's approved and used there's little incentive to "find out why it works, either alone or in concert with another substance...". Until then it could be that it puts the magically gnomes in your head on coffee break, we just don't know. It's all speculation.
 
No one cares enough to find the actual mechanism of how Lidocaine stops tinnitus, as it's an older drug before they had to find silly things like binding affinities. Since it's approved and used there's little incentive to "find out why it works, either alone or in concert with another substance...". Until then it could be that it puts the magically gnomes in your head on coffee break, we just don't know. It's all speculation.
Someone was cured of our type of "hyperacusis" or "dysacusis/low reactive tones" with Lidocaine and Procaine shots in the trigeminal nerve in addition to eardrum patches and Bonain's solution dripped down the ET as an anesthetic. It's worth looking into. More cases of "hyperacusis" than we may know of are probably entirely middle ear related.
 
Recently I was at the periodontist for a cleaning and they used Lidocaine gel because I have recession and pain and they used more this time than usual - so much that my tongue got a little too numb and didn't totally work for swallowing. But on the way home I realized something and checked it when I went home. My tinnitus was not gone, but it was MUCH quieter. I had read studies that this was possible but temporary, so I figured it would come back in a couple hours and it did. But it was definitely an interesting hour to have that much reduced tinnitus.
 

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