Poll: How Do You React to Sugar?

Does sugary foods affect your tinnitus?

  • Yes, sugar spikes my tinnitus

  • No, sugar doesn't affect my tinnitus

  • Depends, sometimes sugar can affect my tinnitus (explain in comments)


Results are only viewable after voting.
It depends man!
for example i ear a lot of wheat and it doesnt spike.
but on saturday i just had 1 drink with a spoon for regular sugar.
and i had 2 days with louder T.
so, no more sugar for me lol
 
It depends man!
for example i ear a lot of wheat and it doesnt spike.
but on saturday i just had 1 drink with a spoon for regular sugar.
and i had 2 days with louder T.
so, no more sugar for me lol


Just wanting to get some numbers :)
 
Any effects with Gatorade or Powerade?

I enjoy those drinks and can substitute soda for them if they don't spike my T.

So let's hope they don't haha.
 
Any effects with Gatorade or Powerade?

I enjoy those drinks and can substitute soda for them if they don't spike my T.

So let's hope they don't haha.

There must be a low sugar version of those no?
you can try them, i mean i wouldnt do it, but that is because i dont like it to spike haha.
but for example some people find that beer eases their tinnitus, and some others have an awful spike.
so... you never know, unless you try it.
 
There must be a low sugar version of those no?
you can try them, i mean i wouldnt do it, but that is because i dont like it to spike haha.
but for example some people find that beer eases their tinnitus, and some others have an awful spike.
so... you never know, unless you try it.

That's true I have had some since T, and I don't think it spiked it..

Not sure to be honest
 
Sugar doesn't impact me at all.
 
if you've had beer, you've had tons of sugar. your body treats it the same.

Don't get all hung up on food. I did for 2 weeks and it just fed my anxiety, which was way worse than anything else in terms of intensity. Normalcy is important. This is hard enough without self fulfilling prophecy.

The one thing I can say I had to cut back on was coffee. I wont have more than one cup and I used to drink 4 a morning just 2 months ago. My guess is that is also tied to anxiety; I'm better than a few weeks ago, but still generally anxious. Stims aren't exactly the best thing for anxiety. I'm sure as the anxiety continues to fade, I'll be able to add caffeine back in.
 
if you've had beer, you've had tons of sugar. your body treats it the same.

Don't get all hung up on food. I did for 2 weeks and it just fed my anxiety, which was way worse than anything else in terms of intensity. Normalcy is important. This is hard enough without self fulfilling prophecy.

The one thing I can say I had to cut back on was coffee. I wont have more than one cup and I used to drink 4 a morning just 2 months ago. My guess is that is also tied to anxiety; I'm better than a few weeks ago, but still generally anxious. Stims aren't exactly the best thing for anxiety. I'm sure as the anxiety continues to fade, I'll be able to add caffeine back in.

Thanks for your reply mate!
Yeah I've just had anxiety and depression before my onset, and wanna learn as much as possible and take steps so I don't have unnecessary spikes I guess.

I had a bottle of Gatorade today, I didn't seem to spike tonight, tomorrow might be a different story but I think I'm okay.

Salt is probably one I feel would affect people.. Salt and caffeine.. Anything that dehydrates or changes blood pressure and such as tinnitus changes are linked to pressure changes, for me anyway.

I really think it would be foods or drinks that could narrow or widen blood flow that spikes T.

It makes sense. As people say their T is worse when laying down. Which is most likely due to blood pressure in the head changing.
 
@LukeYoung

Spending time on this site you'll get some good information, but be cautious because a lot of it from the bias of rightfully terrified people.

Before worrying about blood pressure - get a test. They probably tested you when you went to the ENT. Was it high? If not - don't be too alarmed.

My guess is people perceive it more when laying down is they potentially have
A - an ear to the pillow
B - less stimulus around them, and focus in (not moving, getting ready for bed, etc)

Blood pressure is lower when laying down, so that's unlikely the cause.

I'll tell you what I wish I could find on this site 5-6 weeks ago. I got tinnitus from an acoustic trauma - the loudest, most garbage dubstep party you could imagine, in a stone warehouse. I shouldn't have been there, but went to see some friends from out of town. The first 2 weeks were utter hell. My symptoms have backed off tremendously since then, and judging by 6/16 as your onset, they may for you also.

I doubt I'll have remission or life without temporary "spikes" (whatever the hell that means), but I can say that I'm sure the main reason I'm starting to feel better is that I'm calming down and not making every decision about whether or not it'll increase tinnitus symptoms (other than exposing myself to dangerous sound levels). More than likely it won't, if it does it's probably because I expected it to.

That said - sugar is terrible for a host of other reasons. It's probably the most addictive, least beneficial substance I've ever encountered, and cutting it out will only help everything in your life.
 
I'm really confused about sugar. It sometimes spike my tinnitus and other times it has no effect on it. Weird thing.
 
I love sugar......not generally as the white crystals on their own....don't like it in tea/coffee etc, but biscuits,ice cream.....salivating even at the thought.

I'm not a fat or salt lover...no butter dripping over things, no cream slopped on things, don't pile salt into every dish I cook. Vegetarian, so animal fats are out in any case.

Caffeine dependent, probably....but hey, a better addiction than nicotine or dope.

Thankfully, for me, no food/drink affects my tinnitus positively or adversely. Initially I would have eaten eye of newt or drunk bat's blood if I'd thought it would cure the tinnitus (accepting they are animal origin), but no more.

I also am not adversely affected by noise etc.

My tinnitus reached a peak over about 6 weeks and stayed there. A severe bout of 'flu cranked it up a notch or two in February 2015, and a different sound came along with a virus infection February 2016. Now it's pretty stable, 24/7, 365 days a year (probably 366 this year), but sugar,caffeine, salt, alcohol etc. don't affect it.

Fungus.
 
@LukeYoung

Spending time on this site you'll get some good information, but be cautious because a lot of it from the bias of rightfully terrified people.

Before worrying about blood pressure - get a test. They probably tested you when you went to the ENT. Was it high? If not - don't be too alarmed.

My guess is people perceive it more when laying down is they potentially have
A - an ear to the pillow
B - less stimulus around them, and focus in (not moving, getting ready for bed, etc)

Blood pressure is lower when laying down, so that's unlikely the cause.

I'll tell you what I wish I could find on this site 5-6 weeks ago. I got tinnitus from an acoustic trauma - the loudest, most garbage dubstep party you could imagine, in a stone warehouse. I shouldn't have been there, but went to see some friends from out of town. The first 2 weeks were utter hell. My symptoms have backed off tremendously since then, and judging by 6/16 as your onset, they may for you also.

I doubt I'll have remission or life without temporary "spikes" (whatever the hell that means), but I can say that I'm sure the main reason I'm starting to feel better is that I'm calming down and not making every decision about whether or not it'll increase tinnitus symptoms (other than exposing myself to dangerous sound levels). More than likely it won't, if it does it's probably because I expected it to.

That said - sugar is terrible for a host of other reasons. It's probably the most addictive, least beneficial substance I've ever encountered, and cutting it out will only help everything in your life.

That's true, I believe stress and anxiety is worse than diet all up.

I just woke up and don't think my T was affected by that drink, so maybe I can enjoy sweet foods :)

I had blood pressure checked with a doctor recently, they say all is good. I think it's just when you have that change in your head after changing positions it could spike, but who knows.
 
I love sugar......not generally as the white crystals on their own....don't like it in tea/coffee etc, but biscuits,ice cream.....salivating even at the thought.

I'm not a fat or salt lover...no butter dripping over things, no cream slopped on things, don't pile salt into every dish I cook. Vegetarian, so animal fats are out in any case.

Caffeine dependent, probably....but hey, a better addiction than nicotine or dope.

Thankfully, for me, no food/drink affects my tinnitus positively or adversely. Initially I would have eaten eye of newt or drunk bat's blood if I'd thought it would cure the tinnitus (accepting they are animal origin), but no more.

I also am not adversely affected by noise etc.

My tinnitus reached a peak over about 6 weeks and stayed there. A severe bout of 'flu cranked it up a notch or two in February 2015, and a different sound came along with a virus infection February 2016. Now it's pretty stable, 24/7, 365 days a year (probably 366 this year), but sugar,caffeine, salt, alcohol etc. don't affect it.

Fungus.


Thanks fungus. Good information, good to know!

I used to have salt on every dish.. Not good I know. But past couple nights, I haven't had any really, let's just hope I don't get spikes from diet.

If I do, I do. But would be nice to be able to enjoy whatever food and drink.
 
Luke, salt is definitely bad for the BP, so maybe just moderate the amount you use. No doubt loading everything with sugar is also pretty awful, particularly if there is diabetes in the family. Sugars are natural foods....why not enjoy them?

Strikes me that if some food item is thought to cause a problem with tinnitus on some occasions and not others, then it's not likely that the food item was the source of the problem in the first place. (Or to be a bit more scientific, a 'chance association'). If I try a new food today and scrape my car this afternoon.....doesn't mean the new food caused me to scrape the car.

Seems to me the same thing can be said about many nutritional supplements (some of which are VERY high priced). Unlikely I was deficient in X in the first place, therefore flooding the body by way of tablets of X is not likely to help tinnitus.

Now, anxiety,depression, dwelling on tinnitus etc, they really DO influence tinnitus. Much easier to see how they could and would,too.

So, tinnitus has come along and really can make life a total misery. Take away the little pleasures from food, drink, music, socialising etc. and it really will make life not worth living.

So....gotta live with it......not die/want to die with it.

Fungus.
 
Luke, salt is definitely bad for the BP, so maybe just moderate the amount you use. No doubt loading everything with sugar is also pretty awful, particularly if there is diabetes in the family. Sugars are natural foods....why not enjoy them?

Strikes me that if some food item is thought to cause a problem with tinnitus on some occasions and not others, then it's not likely that the food item was the source of the problem in the first place. (Or to be a bit more scientific, a 'chance association'). If I try a new food today and scrape my car this afternoon.....doesn't mean the new food caused me to scrape the car.

Seems to me the same thing can be said about many nutritional supplements (some of which are VERY high priced). Unlikely I was deficient in X in the first place, therefore flooding the body by way of tablets of X is not likely to help tinnitus.

Now, anxiety,depression, dwelling on tinnitus etc, they really DO influence tinnitus. Much easier to see how they could and would,too.

So, tinnitus has come along and really can make life a total misery. Take away the little pleasures from food, drink, music, socialising etc. and it really will make life not worth living.

So....gotta live with it......not die/want to die with it.

Fungus.

That's for sure mate :)
It seems like you gotta enjoy every aspect of life that you can!
 
Good question. I am beginning to wonder if sugar caused my T to spike last week. I was drinking a lot of soda. Way more than usual. I guess I will have to find out.
 
No foods or drugs (caffeine, alcohol, tobacco, salt, sugar, ibuprofen, benadryl, acetaminophen, cannabis, all claimed to affect T) change my T one bit.

CHEWING and SWALLOWING any foods, however, and making any neck motion like that, spikes the shit out of my T.
 

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