Afraid not. I spoke to Professor Dirk De Ridder who published a lot of papers on tinnitus. He says that (no matter what the origin of tinnitus is), 70 % of tinnitus patients have a somatic component, i.e. flex their jaw, press their face, flex their neck to make tinnitus louder or quieter. I guess we'd have to take his word for it.Is there a way to identify whether somatic T is caused by muscle tension versus neck/spine issues? If I have some trigger points, does it mean muscle tension?
I would start light physical therapy at home... If you experience more pain or worse tinnitus, stop.Thanks for the response. I feel I have more extreme somatic symptoms (neck stretch/rotation, bending forward/backwards, talking, face massage all increase my T, some causing a spike). I also have bilateral T, indicating systemic issue. I was wondering whether to check out a physical therapist or chiropractor. I called a few physical therapists, they are not aware of trigger point massage for tinnitus. 3/4 of a year...that is good to know.
Does exercise help to reduce the symptoms, or worsen them?
Yes, try the short nod 3 x 10 times a day.Thanks for the response. I feel I have more extreme somatic symptoms (neck stretch/rotation, bending forward/backwards, talking, face massage all increase my T, some causing a spike). I also have bilateral T, indicating systemic issue. I was wondering whether to check out a physical therapist or chiropractor. I called a few physical therapists, they are not aware of trigger point massage for tinnitus. 3/4 of a year...that is good to know.
Does exercise help to reduce the symptoms, or worsen them?
That's a very good question.Does exercise help to reduce the symptoms, or worsen them?
I see a certain contradiction in the statement.I spoke to Professor Dirk De Ridder who published a lot of papers on tinnitus. He says that (no matter what the origin of tinnitus is), 70 % of tinnitus patients have a somatic component, i.e. flex their jaw, press their face, flex their neck to make tinnitus louder or quieter.
It is not uncommon for a tinnitus disease to develop a shift in attention that causes sounds to be heard that were not noticed before, but were probably always there.
It's like a ticking clock whose ticking never caught your attention - and now it disturbs...
Is somatic tinnitus also common when the cause is noise?
On days when I don't have tinnitus, I can still produce tones by turning my neck in different ways. I can also make a tone appear in my right ear which is usually completely silent.
Does this suggest that my tinnitus could be caused by anything other than noise?
If you talk to my T physchologist she would blame you are somatizing your diseasse and you need to stop looking.
But yeah we all know how strange it can be. Even on days when I have high T, I cannot control it with my neck and sometimes I can.
Ok this is a general question for somatic tinnitus... does it ever go away completely after treatment ??? Everyone seems to complain from it yet no one has said they've cured itSums mine up nicely, jaw movement, head movement, pressing temple bone changes the tinnitus a lot.
I do have TMJ, arthritis and inflammation though.
I've seen an excellent ENT in Brisbane he said straight away it's musculoskeletal bruxism and neck tension. This doctor is the best his name is Andrew Lomas.Anyone know any decent doctors in Sydney?
I wake up with an alarm ringing in my right ear but as soon as I get up and stretch my neck it goes away or dies down to a faint hiss. Definitely tension in the neck from bad sleeping position or jaw clenching ... who knows what I do when I'm asleepHi guys!
Thank you for taking the time to read my post.
I went to a specialist and he said that my hearing results were fine, there wasn't any hearing loss.
So I was wondering if it was hidden?
Or if could be caused by tense muscles or something similar?
Symptoms include:
My tinnitus increases if I put pressure on my jaw in all directions, or if I move my neck (as far as you can go).
Even if I put pressure on the side of my head with my palm and push there's a tinnitus increase. This is for both sides.
Sometimes a second frequency shows up if I do so. The tinnitus goes back to normal once I stop applying pressure.
If I massage the sides of my face with my palm I notice that the tinnitus changes to more of a empty vibration instead of an actual frequency if that makes sense.
For those with that have noise induced, do you have similar symptoms if you do the same thing? I was reading that some do and don't...
I hear one sound continually, a high pitch that I always describe as a "ballast going out in a fluorescent light sound". I have noticed when I bend my neck forward toward my chest, that sound gets louder. Anyone have any idea what that could mean? Or, does anyone share these same symptoms? Thanks.
thanks for the response. my post was moved to this thread and after reading it guess I now realize how common this thing actually is...you mention you have been able to stop the continuous sound for large portions of the day with supplements. May I ask what supplements were able to do this for you? I am open to all suggestions. thxsAfter 4 months I've been able to stop the continuous sound for large parts of the day but only when I'm taking supplements so far.
A short one (e.g. explosion, gunshot) or a longer lasting one (e.g. music, concert)?I find this weird as my tinnitus was definitely caused by an acoustic trauma...
Does your TMJ click or make crunching sounds? I'm pushing for an TMJ MRI to be done ASAP. I hate this noise. Have to be proactive. Sleep apnea needs to be checked out as well.My neck also has been cracking for years, but I never gave it too much attention.
Not always. Sometimes with sudden movement my jaw feels to be a bit misaligned and funny, but I don't think that there is anything wrong with that. And I can't modulate tinnitus with jaw movement, only with my neck. I do have overbite though. And I'm deadly afraid now of MRI, because the brain MRI (or the anxiety around it) spiked my tinnitus. Went down in a week or so, but was not a nice experience.Does your TMJ click or make crunching sounds? I'm pushing for an TMJ MRI to be done ASAP. I hate this noise. Have to be proactive. Sleep apnea needs to be checked out as well.