Magnesium Could Offer Fresh Hope to Tinnitus Sufferers

I started a regimen of vitamin b2 which has magnesium stearate. 100ml per day orally taken. I'm interested to see if there will be any result. My trial will conclude in about one year.
You might want to research that a bit more.

Your Vitamin B2 liquid may have a bit (inactive amount) of magnesium stearate, sure, but its purpose is to be an additive. And it's somewhat controversial too.

Google "magnesium stearate"
 
Thanks, will do, I was interested in B2 was noted in helping with T.

So I was conducting a trial into its effectiveness. Currently no discernible difference is noted.
I read up on magnesium in some medical journals, they referred that up to 400 mgs was tolerable dose of magnesium.

My head thus way after conversing with my MD.
 
Hi everyone, I've had tinnitus for 2 weeks now. I am still waiting to see a specialist to investigate what might be going on, but like many other people, it's incredibly stressful, depressing, and maddening. I am only 26 and have been exposed to very few loud environments, that being said in the week prior to this beginning, I went to one unfortunately loud concert and had a stressful life event take place.

The tinnitus doesn't stop, it's in one ear, a high pitch ring. The other ear is intermittent buzzing but manageable. It's worse at night so I now have white noise going. I started taking 150 mg of Magnesium Citrate and may start trying Ginkgo Biloba. As soon as I leave my apartment or step outside, I can no longer hear it, which make's me feel like this is a mild form of tinnitus? Does your tinnitus follow you outside? Has anyone had tinnitus actually go away? Thanks.
 
Hi everyone, I've had tinnitus for 2 weeks now. I am still waiting to see a specialist to investigate what might be going on, but like many other people, it's incredibly stressful, depressing, and maddening. I am only 26 and have been exposed to very few loud environments, that being said in the week prior to this beginning, I went to one unfortunately loud concert and had a stressful life event take place.

The tinnitus doesn't stop, it's in one ear, a high pitch ring. The other ear is intermittent buzzing but manageable. It's worse at night so I now have white noise going. I started taking 150 mg of Magnesium Citrate and may start trying Ginkgo Biloba. As soon as I leave my apartment or step outside, I can no longer hear it, which make's me feel like this is a mild form of tinnitus? Does your tinnitus follow you outside? Has anyone had tinnitus actually go away? Thanks.
Yes, it will follow you everywhere you go. Just start by taking care of your ears and staying away from loud places. Dont sit at home and think about this, it will only make it worst. If it goes away outside and then outside. The less you think about it the quieter it gets and it is a cumulative effect. It can go away if you don't have any underlying conditions.
Do the basics, no caffeine, no nicotine, exercise, eat right, no stress, no anxiety, listen to music etc etc. the quicker you start to do this the better chance you have of it not becoming cronic.
 
Yes, it will follow you everywhere you go. Just start by taking care of your ears and staying away from loud places. Dont sit at home and think about this, it will only make it worst. If it goes away outside and then outside. The less you think about it the quieter it gets and it is a cumulative effect. It can go away if you don't have any underlying conditions.
Do the basics, no caffeine, no nicotine, exercise, eat right, no stress, no anxiety, listen to music etc etc. the quicker you start to do this the better chance you have of it not becoming cronic.
Can stress and anxiety make T permanent?
 
Speaking from personal experience, magnesium is one of the only supplements that has made a discernable difference in my anxiety levels and it helped accelerate my habituation process. Even if it was just placebo secondary (through the muscle-stabilizing primary effect), it is worth taking a daily 200 mg + supplement.
 
Speaking from personal experience, magnesium is one of the only supplements that has made a discernable difference in my anxiety levels and it helped accelerate my habituation process. Even if it was just placebo secondary (through the muscle-stabilizing primary effect), it is worth taking a daily 200 mg + supplement.

@Kaelon, what kind of magnesium do you take? I go back and forth between magnesium glycinate and magnesium citrate, but I've read that threonate might be better.
 
An interesting and insightful article:

https://www.dddmag.com/article/2017/03/magnesium-could-offer-fresh-hope-tinnitus-sufferers

A diet high in Magnesium may at least keep T from getting worse. I'm glad to see that there is good research going on. It should give all T sufferers hope.

Magnesium Could Offer Fresh Hope to Tinnitus Sufferers
Tue, 03/14/2017 - 7:56am 1 Comment
by Martine Hamann, University of Leicester, The Conversation
View attachment 12391
You may be familiar with the experience of a ringing sensation in your ears after a night out enjoying some good music. Perhaps you've never given it a second thought as the sound normally disappears on its own. But what if you were to wake up in the morning and still have the ringing in your ears? And what if the ringing never stopped?

This is tinnitus – better described as the phantom perception of sound. Tinnitus affects 10 to 15% of the adult population worldwide and there are currently no drug therapies available on the market. The reason for this is a limited understanding of how tinnitus sets in and what prevents it from going away.

My work at the University of Leicester is focused on filling in the current knowledge gaps – and Dr Thomas Tagoe, one of my former PhD students, funded by Action on Hearing Loss, made some exciting discoveries which were recently published in The Journal of Experimental Neurology. The discovery is not a magic pill against tinnitus, but reveals some of the mechanisms underlying its development and provides avenues for possible treatment.

Phantom sounds

The generation and transmission of signals in the brain are subject to constant changes. In particular, signals can be boosted or tuned down in a process known as "plasticity". When signals are boosted, it is referred to as "long-term potentiation", a process which is critical in our ability to learn and store memories.

Knowing that tinnitus is a phantom sound which does not exist in the outside world but is perceived, suggests that somewhere in the brain there are cells generating a false signal in response to a sound which does not exist. Studies show that auditory signals are transmitted from the cochlea, in the inner ear, to a brain structure called the dorsal cochlear nucleus. So in our quest to find out how tinnitus sets in and what prevents it from going away, this is where we started: in the dorsal cochlear nucleus.

Cells in the dorsal cochlear nucleus are capable of boosting their signals. Based on previous results Thomas had obtained in the lab, we had good reason to believe that this ability could be compromised after multiple exposures to loud sound. If true, this would be strong evidence implicating the dorsal cochlear nucleus as the false signal generator, making it a target for therapeutic intervention.

To test this out, we designed a research programme which would induce tinnitus in an animal model. This involved creating an experience of multiple exposures to loud sound, testing for limitations in the signal boosting capacity and finally assessing whether this is pivotal in the generation of the false auditory signal called tinnitus.

Our suspicions were right: exposure to loud sound prevented the dorsal cochlear nucleus from boosting its incoming signals. What was even more interesting was that loud sound exposure turned up the dials, saturated the signal transmission and left no more room to boost the signal any further. Exposure to loud sound therefore altered brain plasticity, leaving the dorsal cochlear nucleus in a compromised state.

What triggers tinnitus?

First, there is an exposure to loud sound – either instantly from an explosion or multiples experiences over a long period of time. This induces a temporary period of hearing loss or a "hard-of-hearing" experience, where the whole world appears to have turned down its volume. During this period, cells in the dorsal cochlear nucleus try to compensate for this low surrounding volume by boosting their signal.

This intervention is successful, but by the time the temporary hearing loss disappears, the signal boost has been stored as a "memory" in the dorsal cochlear nucleus, a memory which is not easily forgotten. The consequences of this scenario is tinnitus, a false signal generation which is perceived in the absence of an external stimulus. In brief, we have shown that tinnitus is a state of continuous painful learning.

We showed that tinnitus sets in at a specific sound frequency, after the experience of loud sound exposure. Better yet, we showed that a high magnesium diet can prevent the dorsal cochlear nucleus from turning the dials all the way up and locking this in place as a memory. With that intervention, we were able to prevent the subsequent perception of tinnitus.

The next step is to identify drugs which can prevent the development of tinnitus and also reverse it. We now have a good starting point and are looking for drugs which can elevate magnesium concentration in the brain or mimic its action. Until this work is complete, however, we'll have to rely on the tried and tested safeguards – limiting noise exposure or wearing ear protection.

Best and worst forms of Magnesium:

http://www.naturalnews.com/046401_magnesium_dietary_supplements_nutrient_absorption.html

https://88herbs.com/best-magnesium-supplement-to-avoid-diarrhea/

I have ordered a couple bottles of above today. Sounds like it has better absorbtion rates and no side effects. I didn't like the chelated version.

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  • 100% Pure Magnesium Bisglycinate – Most Absorbable Magnesium
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