I have the same thing, I have been told by Dr Nagler that this is not tinnitus causing the pain. Mine comes on heavy at night when I put my ear to the pillow, my T blows up and the screaching high volume hurts in the same way as if you were to put headphones on, turn the volume up until it actually caused physical pain to the ear.Tinnitus can hurt and not for a hyperacus point of view,I take my aids out the tinnitus gets louder and my ears start to hurt
The brain projects pain onto the broken part, crudely speaking. If you amputate your leg, it will hurt, but, its supposed to stop once it heals up. If it still hurts even though it is healed, this is called phantom limb pain syndrome. It has been demonstrated by an Indian neuroscientist that by tricking the brain by using a mirror image of his other leg in place of the missing limb, then the pain goes away! Remove the mirror and the excruciating pain comes back - how f-ed up is that?...I have the same thing, I have been told by Dr Nagler that this is not tinnitus causing the pain. Mine comes on heavy at night when I put my ear to the pillow, my T blows up and the screaching high volume hurts in the same way as if you were to put headphones on, turn the volume up until it actually caused physical pain to the ear.
The brain projects pain onto the broken part, crudely speaking. If you amputate your leg, it will hurt, but, its supposed to stop once it heals up. If it still hurts even though it is healed, this is called phantom limb pain syndrome. It has been demonstrated by an Indian neuroscientist that by tricking the brain by using a mirror image of his other leg in place of the missing limb, then the pain goes away! Remove the mirror and the excruciating pain comes back - how f-ed up is that?...
Problem with tinnitus you cannot really trick the brain into believing you have regained hearing, but in some cases as with Carlover's hearing aids, they trick the brain on some frequencies and relieve the pain.
Hearing aids are limited to up to about 7khz amplification, so its not enough to bring back the high frequencies....Dont know why they cant invent a 1-20khz amplifier and at least use it during sleep with no T or pain....
I don't think it's that simple. The problem is that one generally doesn't go completely deaf in certain frequencies. You can still pick up sounds of high frequencies it just takes a bit higher volume. It's not like with a missing limb where it's all or nothing. A leg is either missing or it's not.
It's not the problem of not hearing sounds of some frequencies. You could actually spend your whole life in a padded room and never hear any sounds higher then let's say 60 db and not even in frequencies higher then 10 000 hz. You don't develop tinnitus because of that. You develop tinnitus because your brain has certain pathways of neuronal input that no longer work as they should.
Even though they might have similarities you shouldn't compare our senses like that, because they are still different. When you hold a mirror and use it to trick the brain you are actually using a different sense, namely your sight, to trick the brain and it doesn't make the pain go away completely. It can relieve the pain in some people. It's a bit different then removing it completely for everybody.
Also if you were to use an amplifier that amplifies all frequencies, if you don't actually need it to hear normal sounds, you would probably end up damaging your hearing even more which would then most likely worsen your condition.
Yes thats very true, and I was going to bring his example up, but then thought maybe let him just RIP.Craig had pain with his tinnitus @dan as you must remember..I've seen many folks with painful ears on bad T days in other boards.
Sorry but you dont make any sense at all.
You dont need to lose all your limb - it could be 1/10 of a limb - you can still get phantom pain, just like you lost half thet hearing at 12 khz - your brain is not stupid - it KNOWS its gone.
Second, if you live in a soundproof room - you WILL develop some tinnitus depending on how much hearing loss you really have, as your brain starts focusing in on itself.
In the experiment, the pain was relieved completely, if I recall correctly. It does not happen in all people, but some....they cannot explain why yet....
There are still many unanswered questions, thats for sure.
Yes but they trick the brain thinking its backAnd just like you said your brain knows it's gone so no hearing aids would help with that.
Yes but they trick the brain thinking its back
You want to know something funny and sad?
I actually emailed Dr.Shore- the researcher in your link, and she does not know anything about how the thalamus is involved in tinnitus. She said she doesnt know about the thalamus "thingie".....![]()
Yes but they trick the brain thinking its back
You want to know something funny and sad?
I actually emailed Dr.Shore- the researcher in your link, and she does not know anything about how the thalamus is involved in tinnitus. She said she doesnt know about the thalamus "thingie".....![]()
never hear any sound higher then let's say 60 db and not even in frequencies higher then 10 000 hz. You don't develop tinnitus because of that. You develop tinnitus because your
Why pain is sometimes involved with tinnitus is because of the wiring in the DCN (Dorsal Cochlear Nucleus, the place in the brain where inputs from the ears go before being wired through to the auditory cortex). It is believed that in some people that suffer from T. (mostly people with somatic T.) the signals from the pain and touch receptors in the face and neck can cross over to the DCN to produce or enhance T.
This is exactly how I feel when I'm having a bad night. It isn't always the noise that makes me struggle nowadays - it's more like the feeling of T that really puts the last nail in the coffin.I have the same thing, I have been told by Dr Nagler that this is not tinnitus causing the pain. Mine comes on heavy at night when I put my ear to the pillow, my T blows up and the screaching high volume hurts in the same way as if you were to put headphones on, turn the volume up until it actually caused physical pain to the ear.
This can be true since Katadolon, a fibro drug can work for some T cases.Chronic pain and t involve the same neural pathways i think