Tinnitus Cured (Changed Diet to One Rich in Polyphenols)

bitrunner

Member
Author
Jun 29, 2016
19
Tinnitus Since
2/12015
Cause of Tinnitus
tick bite
I started suffering from tinnitus a little over a year ago after getting bitten by several ticks. I went to the ear doctor and he said there was no cure, and I would have to adjust by listening to white noise. I wasn't satisfied with the answer, and my PC told have I had a blocked eustachion tube. The recommended treatment was either sudafed or mucinex, neither of which helped. Gargling red Pepper helped a little, but didn't solve the problem. I discovered accidentally that the tinnitus would go away if I had a complete bowel movement, leading me to believe that it had something to do with an imbalance in my gut bacteria.

to make a long story short, I changed my diet to one rich in polyphenols. Polyphenols feed the good bacteria, and one of the richest sources of polyphenol is peppermint leaves and cloves. I tried both, along with eating foods high in resistant starch, and the tinnitus disappeared. So every day I make a smoothie with foods high in polphenols- google for a list- along with several doses of peppermint teas leaves. I also eat a cup of home made Greek yogurt. Adding prebiotics to your diet might also help.

I hope this helps those who are suffering. Best I can determine is that getting your gut bacteria in balance reduces inflammation , and therefore helps reduce swelling in the eustachion tube.
 
@bitrunner

I share some parallels with your story. In my case, it is not finished and I can not say that I am cured yet. Your approach brings up the very overlooked root cause of microbial overgrowth/imbalance. There is this misunderstanding that pathogens will cause large infections, but in our body there are several pounds of bacteria, virus and fungi that live in symbiosis with our organism. There are many risk factors to get an imbalance in the micro biome and if the wrong kind of commensal microorganism ends up in the wrong place one can start having unexpected symptoms. For example, in the middle ear or somewhere in the auditory system, one will not get a full blown infection, in fact in many cases will be just an overgrowth, and in the auditory system will easily cause tinnitus without having many other symptoms. People that gets idiopatic T without a clear root cause and have complex sounds and patterns should check the possiblity of microbial overgrowth and the most common is the fungal type. More comments on my story are at the following thread

https://www.tinnitustalk.com/thread...er-taking-anti-fungal-drug.11142/#post-186478

but I do not want get into lengthy explanations until I get an outcome. By the way, did you have T only in the ear that has the Eustachian tube problem? Was your T sound complex?
Congratulations for getting rid of the T and following your own path to health.
 
The tinnitus occurred in both ears and was loud. Not complex.
I tried a lot of different things to find a cure, but taking the peppermint leaves in water made the most notable difference in the shortest period of time. Resistant starch- green bananas, cooked baked potatoes eaten cold, plantains, chick peas - also helped.
If you get your microbiome in balance, you will improve your health in so many ways, plus you will lessen your need for drugs like naproxen and acetimetephen because your inflammation will go away.
 
I started suffering from tinnitus a little over a year ago after getting bitten by several ticks. I went to the ear doctor and he said there was no cure, and I would have to adjust by listening to white noise. I wasn't satisfied with the answer, and my PC told have I had a blocked eustachion tube. The recommended treatment was either sudafed or mucinex, neither of which helped. Gargling red Pepper helped a little, but didn't solve the problem. I discovered accidentally that the tinnitus would go away if I had a complete bowel movement, leading me to believe that it had something to do with an imbalance in my gut bacteria.

to make a long story short, I changed my diet to one rich in polyphenols. Polyphenols feed the good bacteria, and one of the richest sources of polyphenol is peppermint leaves and cloves. I tried both, along with eating foods high in resistant starch, and the tinnitus disappeared. So every day I make a smoothie with foods high in polphenols- google for a list- along with several doses of peppermint teas leaves. I also eat a cup of home made Greek yogurt. Adding prebiotics to your diet might also help.

I hope this helps those who are suffering. Best I can determine is that getting your gut bacteria in balance reduces inflammation , and therefore helps reduce swelling in the eustachion tube.

Bullshit
 
Polyphenols has nothing to do with balancing the gut flora with Good bacteria (healthy Microbiome).

Fibers ( Transformed into short chained fatty acides that feeds the good bateria)
Glutamine
Probiotics

These helps the gut.
 

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