She is, but she has a clear high tone. I think it was measured at 11khz. She tried all kinds of therapy.
Whats interesting is that all of the above points for somatic tinnitus match me
I mean, every single one. And im very tense in my shoulders/neck. What kind of therapy is recommended for this
@MikeS ?
I'm at work right now, but I will send you links later. I am recovering from whiplash, too. But somatic tinnitus can occur from poor sleeping posture, and other activities that put tension on your neck & shoulders. I suspect that is why tinnitus seems to reset for some people (like me) after sleep -- in no particular direction. Good some mornings, bad others.
There are different things that I have read about, and am still in the process of trying myself, so I'm not a success story yet. I will post later with info, but here is my approach:
* Lifestyle changes for me:
-- Learn to sleep on back (best), or side (second best). Stop sleeping on stomach, or in positions where my neck is crimped.
-- Purchase one of those pillows that are supposed to be good for neck. I'll find link later.
-- Watch ergonomics, computer use, television watching.
-- Neck stretching followed by neck strengthening for pain exercises.
-- Shoulder saver exercises
-- drink more water / hydrate
-- lose weight -- this may sound silly, but I wear an XL hat, and have recently gained some weight, so I plan on losing weight to reduce strain on neck.
* Other things that seem to offer me relief:
-- take warm showers -- I find that warm showers help my tinnitus temporarily. My theory is that it relaxes the muscles
-- ice pack -- just something that I am trying, nothing that I read about. But since ice packs are supposed to reduce inflammation in muscles, thought I would trying using one each night for 20 minutes. Thought I would try this out for a couple weeks.
-- drink an occasional beer -- may be coincidence, but for some reason, my tinnitus feels better after a beer. Maybe its because alcohol relaxes the muscles.
-- take ibuprofen
* Treatment
-- Physical Therapy (massage therapy)
* Other possible treatments:
-- there was a study where they found a TENS unit cured or relieved patients with somatic tinnitus
-- there is a study where using an epidural steroid injection has cured or relieved patients with somatic tinnitus
How come Physical Therapy does not help some people with somatic tinnitus due to neck injury? I read about people with similar symptoms, where PT does not help. This is still new to me, but I wonder if they are making all the lifestyle changes that they need to treat the muscle tension / spasms. For instance, if they get PT, and then go back to the same poor posture or don't follow through with neck stretches. Or maybe they have some other form of tinnitus? Or maybe I'm just overly optimistic, and in a few days, everything will spike again.
In summary, I plan on doing what I can to relieve tension in my neck, so that I can recover from whiplash. I'm not sure if my tinnitus will go away, but I do not want it to spike anymore, which can be quite intense.