- Sep 12, 2017
- 1,153
- Tinnitus Since
- 09/2017
- Cause of Tinnitus
- Unknown
I saw this interesting article lately on tinnitus and the neck muscles and someone kindly translated it for me
https://www.stern.de/gesundheit/tin...eine-frage-der-nackenmuskulatur--7620856.html
It is entitled- "Tinnitus - all a question of the neck muscles?". Basically the article says that in some people tinnitus is related to two small muscles hidden deep in the neck, the splenius capitis muscle and the semispinalis muscle capitis. It says that manual therapy targeting these muscles can help reduce tinnitus in many. I don't know how true this is. But as I do know a very good physiotherapist whose neck exercises hugely helped a permanent headache I had, I decided to go and talk to him about this article and potential physiotherapy that might help tinnitus. He said you can't access those small muscles in the neck as they are too deep. But you can target the ones around them which will help to relax them.
The exercises he gave me to target these was as follows. I figured it was worth posting here: Sit on a chair against a wall with your head on the wall. Simply slide your head up the wall, creating a double chin. Don't hold this for the 1st two weeks – the brain will learn the muscle engagement. After 2 weeks start to hold it for 2 seconds. Do 3 sets of 20 a day. I think this was to engage the deep neck flexor muscles.
The physio I saw also commented on an excerpt from my clinic letter from an eminent tinnitus expert in London who had referred to tight paraspinal muscles in neck in the context of tinnitus. The physio said these were the same muscles the German article talks about. This may help corroborate the claims of the article somewhat.
Simple, but possibly worth a shot for many of us, just in case.
https://www.stern.de/gesundheit/tin...eine-frage-der-nackenmuskulatur--7620856.html
It is entitled- "Tinnitus - all a question of the neck muscles?". Basically the article says that in some people tinnitus is related to two small muscles hidden deep in the neck, the splenius capitis muscle and the semispinalis muscle capitis. It says that manual therapy targeting these muscles can help reduce tinnitus in many. I don't know how true this is. But as I do know a very good physiotherapist whose neck exercises hugely helped a permanent headache I had, I decided to go and talk to him about this article and potential physiotherapy that might help tinnitus. He said you can't access those small muscles in the neck as they are too deep. But you can target the ones around them which will help to relax them.
The exercises he gave me to target these was as follows. I figured it was worth posting here: Sit on a chair against a wall with your head on the wall. Simply slide your head up the wall, creating a double chin. Don't hold this for the 1st two weeks – the brain will learn the muscle engagement. After 2 weeks start to hold it for 2 seconds. Do 3 sets of 20 a day. I think this was to engage the deep neck flexor muscles.
The physio I saw also commented on an excerpt from my clinic letter from an eminent tinnitus expert in London who had referred to tight paraspinal muscles in neck in the context of tinnitus. The physio said these were the same muscles the German article talks about. This may help corroborate the claims of the article somewhat.
Simple, but possibly worth a shot for many of us, just in case.