This experiment may benefit people who wake up one day with low tinnitus and the next day with loud tinnitus. Previous experiments I have proposed involved taking it at specific times like 9 p.m. or 2 a.m., however, I believe now those have a fatal flaw. It is my belief that we all have our own body clocks. Some go to bed early and some go to bed late.
Not to mention, "rewinding" the body clock back to an earlier time requires much more than just taking melatonin.
Therefore, my experiment is as follows:
Take .45mg to 1.5mg instant release melatonin RIGHT before you usually fall asleep when it is dark and you are in bed. (Not an hour before or anything like that). This means, if you usually fall asleep at 1:30 a.m., take it then. If you fall asleep usually at 10 p.m., take it then. It MUST match your daily routine as taking melatonin 3 hours before could cause imbalances as your body clock is saying one thing while melatonin is doing another. (My theory, could be wrong) Try to be relaxed as you can and tired enough to fall asleep before you take it.
The reason for this is to affect your neurotransmitters and hormones right before entering stage 1 sleep, in the hopes that those effects, will give you an outcome of lower T when you wake up. Ideally, it would be great if it would be like some kind of "reset" button.
I found a chart that shows that as we age, our melatonin values decline:
Source: https://www.benbest.com/nutrceut/melatonin.html
If this is true, then perhaps a little supplement might help people whose tinnitus volume has gone up over the years.
If this works, then ideally the melatonin dosage would be lowered to the least amount possible.
For futher info on melatonin and tinnitus, you can read this study:
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21859051
If you try this experiment, make sure it is okay with a doctor or pharmacist to take melatonin if you are taking other medications as there could be interactions. If you have erratic sleep patterns or different sleep patterns on the weekend this may not work.
If you try this experiment please report back.
Btw, if this doesn't work the first time but doesn't make your T worse, maybe you can try it for a few days in a row to see if it makes a difference.
Not to mention, "rewinding" the body clock back to an earlier time requires much more than just taking melatonin.
Therefore, my experiment is as follows:
Take .45mg to 1.5mg instant release melatonin RIGHT before you usually fall asleep when it is dark and you are in bed. (Not an hour before or anything like that). This means, if you usually fall asleep at 1:30 a.m., take it then. If you fall asleep usually at 10 p.m., take it then. It MUST match your daily routine as taking melatonin 3 hours before could cause imbalances as your body clock is saying one thing while melatonin is doing another. (My theory, could be wrong) Try to be relaxed as you can and tired enough to fall asleep before you take it.
The reason for this is to affect your neurotransmitters and hormones right before entering stage 1 sleep, in the hopes that those effects, will give you an outcome of lower T when you wake up. Ideally, it would be great if it would be like some kind of "reset" button.
I found a chart that shows that as we age, our melatonin values decline:
Source: https://www.benbest.com/nutrceut/melatonin.html
If this is true, then perhaps a little supplement might help people whose tinnitus volume has gone up over the years.
If this works, then ideally the melatonin dosage would be lowered to the least amount possible.
For futher info on melatonin and tinnitus, you can read this study:
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21859051
If you try this experiment, make sure it is okay with a doctor or pharmacist to take melatonin if you are taking other medications as there could be interactions. If you have erratic sleep patterns or different sleep patterns on the weekend this may not work.
If you try this experiment please report back.
Btw, if this doesn't work the first time but doesn't make your T worse, maybe you can try it for a few days in a row to see if it makes a difference.