I stumbled on – for lack of a less obnoxious word – a protocol that is really helping my tinnitus. This is a long narrative, so I'll break it into several posts. This post will lay out the rules. Next, I'll describe my tinnitus, and my experience with the protocol, so you can decide if it might help you. Two posts will give some detailed tips. Last, for the hell of it, I offer up speculation on why it works. Five posts in all.
There are four parts to the Protocol:
1) Magnesium
Drench your body in magnesium oil. You want to get lots of magnesium into your system. For many reasons, including the nasty things oral magnesium can do to your digestive tract, transdermal application with magnesium oil (slathering the oil over yourself, you absorb it through your skin) is the only good way to do this. A later post will give tips on using magnesium oil.
Do magnesium oil treatments as many days as feasible, for 2 - 4 weeks. After that, you can reduce the frequency.
You won't overdose, so err on the side of too much. While 20 – 40 minutes is what is officially recommended to get good absorption, I like to do an hour or more. If nothing else, an hour or more gets you a very pleasant warm-and-groggy high. Great for insomnia, I imagine.
2) Potassium from food
Moderate your potassium intake from food. "Moderate" meaning, limit your intake of high-potassium foods, but don't go hog wild. You neither should, nor need to, drastically reduce potassium. More about this in a later post.
Also, watch that your potassium intake per meal is not large in relation to how much you are eating. In the course of this stumbling, trial-and-error discovery, a lunch of lentil soup, and an over-the-counter stomach drug that consisted of 30 mg of caraway oil taken away from food, both triggered spikes.
3) Potassium supplements
This part is bizarre and counter-intuitive. Supplement with potassium pills. Take the pills with food, including fatty food, as potassium is fat-soluble.
I take 3 100-mg tablets with breakfast and 5 with dinner. Those were arbitrary numbers I started with, it worked, so I stuck with that dosage. You can of course experiment to see what works best for you.
800 mg per day may seem like a lot, but that's about one banana's worth. And you are moderating the potassium in your diet, so it's probably a wash.
4) Calcium
Moderate your intake of calcium. Like potassium, nothing drastic needed, just moderation. See later post.
For me, this worked right away. (I will elaborate on "worked right away" in the next post.) Having said:
When I started the experiment, I first did magnesium oil treatments for five days, before challenging myself with foods that trigger me. (My tinnitus is triggered by high salicylate and other foods, see next post.) But, I've been using magnesium oil (about once a week) for several years now. I can't say how many days it will take for you to build up enough magnesium to see results (or know it doesn't work for you). Try it for at least a week or two.
I see some posts here by individuals who've noticed that they are triggered by foods, and others who have been helped by magnesium (including one individual who keeps trying to tell y'all that you need get your magnesium from magnesium oil, but y'all keep ignoring him). Also, some have reported success with apple cider vinegar. Reading the ACV thread, I see reported a case where a super-high intake of ACV dangerously lowered someone's potassium levels—again, a link to potassium. That seems an indication that this approach—targeting potassium through magnesium and diet—could work for at least some of you.
There are four parts to the Protocol:
1) Magnesium
Drench your body in magnesium oil. You want to get lots of magnesium into your system. For many reasons, including the nasty things oral magnesium can do to your digestive tract, transdermal application with magnesium oil (slathering the oil over yourself, you absorb it through your skin) is the only good way to do this. A later post will give tips on using magnesium oil.
Do magnesium oil treatments as many days as feasible, for 2 - 4 weeks. After that, you can reduce the frequency.
You won't overdose, so err on the side of too much. While 20 – 40 minutes is what is officially recommended to get good absorption, I like to do an hour or more. If nothing else, an hour or more gets you a very pleasant warm-and-groggy high. Great for insomnia, I imagine.
2) Potassium from food
Moderate your potassium intake from food. "Moderate" meaning, limit your intake of high-potassium foods, but don't go hog wild. You neither should, nor need to, drastically reduce potassium. More about this in a later post.
Also, watch that your potassium intake per meal is not large in relation to how much you are eating. In the course of this stumbling, trial-and-error discovery, a lunch of lentil soup, and an over-the-counter stomach drug that consisted of 30 mg of caraway oil taken away from food, both triggered spikes.
3) Potassium supplements
This part is bizarre and counter-intuitive. Supplement with potassium pills. Take the pills with food, including fatty food, as potassium is fat-soluble.
I take 3 100-mg tablets with breakfast and 5 with dinner. Those were arbitrary numbers I started with, it worked, so I stuck with that dosage. You can of course experiment to see what works best for you.
800 mg per day may seem like a lot, but that's about one banana's worth. And you are moderating the potassium in your diet, so it's probably a wash.
4) Calcium
Moderate your intake of calcium. Like potassium, nothing drastic needed, just moderation. See later post.
For me, this worked right away. (I will elaborate on "worked right away" in the next post.) Having said:
When I started the experiment, I first did magnesium oil treatments for five days, before challenging myself with foods that trigger me. (My tinnitus is triggered by high salicylate and other foods, see next post.) But, I've been using magnesium oil (about once a week) for several years now. I can't say how many days it will take for you to build up enough magnesium to see results (or know it doesn't work for you). Try it for at least a week or two.
I see some posts here by individuals who've noticed that they are triggered by foods, and others who have been helped by magnesium (including one individual who keeps trying to tell y'all that you need get your magnesium from magnesium oil, but y'all keep ignoring him). Also, some have reported success with apple cider vinegar. Reading the ACV thread, I see reported a case where a super-high intake of ACV dangerously lowered someone's potassium levels—again, a link to potassium. That seems an indication that this approach—targeting potassium through magnesium and diet—could work for at least some of you.