Which One Is the Truth? I'm Confused! (Can Drugs or Homeopathic Products Be Harmful for the Brain?)

Hope2015

Member
Author
Aug 14, 2015
38
Tinnitus Since
17.06.2015
Cause of Tinnitus
loud music
Hello everyone!

I had a conversation about tinnitus with someone who graduated Biology&Chemistry.
I told him I want to try trobalt or keppra or whatever just to get better, he said I should never try those drugs for epilepsy because it will destroy the chemistry of the brain and it can even make tinnitus worse after you stop taking them.
I said, ok, then I want to try a homeopatic treatment, you know supplements, tea etc. He said no again, because those will destroy the body balance(his teacher got into hospital because of a homeopatic treatment..I thought homeopatic treatments do not have side effects?).
He said everytime you take meds or something else, you are telling your brain that is doing something wrong and it can't get better...
His conclusion was I shouldn't try anything just wait for my brain to do it's job and he is sure that t will go away.
Honestly this conversation made me even more anxious, because I really want a treatment I don't care if it's homeopatic or epilespy drug or whatever. You know that feeling when you drink even a tea and you have that hope there's a chance to go away...

What do you think about what he told me?
 
Hello everyone!

I had a conversation about tinnitus with someone who graduated Biology&Chemistry.
I told him I want to try trobalt or keppra or whatever just to get better, he said I should never try those drugs for epilepsy because it will destroy the chemistry of the brain and it can even make tinnitus worse after you stop taking them.
I said, ok, then I want to try a homeopatic treatment, you know supplements, tea etc. He said no again, because those will destroy the body balance(his teacher got into hospital because of a homeopatic treatment..I thought homeopatic treatments do not have side effects?).
He said everytime you take meds or something else, you are telling your brain that is doing something wrong and it can't get better...
His conclusion was I shouldn't try anything just wait for my brain to do it's job and he is sure that t will go away.
Honestly this conversation made me even more anxious, because I really want a treatment I don't care if it's homeopatic or epilespy drug or whatever. You know that feeling when you drink even a tea and you have that hope there's a chance to go away...

What do you think about what he told me?

Tinnitus psychopharmacology: A comprehensive review of its pathomechanisms and management
Michele Fornaro and Matteo Martino
Author information ► Article notes ► Copyright and License information ►
This article has been cited by other articles in PMC.

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Abstract
Background:
Subjective tinnitus is a frequent, impairing condition, which may also cause neurotransmitter imbalance at the cochlea. Psychopharmacologic agents, although not being the first-line treatment for tinnitus, may modulate cochlear neurotransmission, thereby influencing the subjective tinnitus experience.

Method:
A comprehensive review of MEDLINE literature (from January 1990–January 2010) was performed searching for: "tinnitus", major classes of psychopharmacological agents, and psychiatric disorders. The most relevant clinical evidence is reported briefly along with a concise description of the main neurotransmitters purported to be involved in tinnitus, in order to provide the reader with a rational evaluation of tinnitus therapy with psychopharmacological agents.

Results:
Although strong methodological issues limit the reliability of the current results, a broad number of psychopharmacological agents have already been considered for tinnitus, both as candidate triggers or potential therapies.

Conclusions:
Selected psychopharmacological drugs may play a role in the clinical management of this disorder. While the rational use of these agents for the treatment of tinnitus should not be overlooked, research should be undertaken on their neuromodulating actions at the cochlea.

Keywords: tinnitus, psychopharmacology, cochlea
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Introduction
Tinnitus, from the Latin word "tinnītus" meaning "ringing"1 is a perception of sound in the absence of external sounds (ICD-10 code, H93.1).2 This phenomenon can be divided into two broad groups: objectiveand subjective tinnitus. Objective tinnitus is provoked by sound generated in the body reaching the ear through conduction in body tissues, while subjective tinnitus is meaningless sounds that are not associated with any physical sound and it can be heard only by the suffering person. Although subjective tinnitus represents a far more prevalent condition compared to objective tinnitus,3 and thereby constitutes a more accessible phenomenon for investigators, current information available on its etiology is unsatisfactory. In fact, while a broad number of heterogeneous pathomechanisms and causes have been postulated (Table 1), no univocal consensus has been reached to date and its management is still a well debated issue. Furthermore, since there are many kinds of subjective tinnitus, the search for a (unique) cure is futile. As consequence, both researchers and clinicians have progressively extended the portfolio of potential therapies (including nonfirst-choice treatments such as psychopharmacological agents) especially for those patients whose tinnitus may be related to comorbid psychological stressors.4

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Table 1

Main hypothesized pathomechanisms and causes of tinnitus
Since some forms of tinnitus may be exacerbated or moderated by psychopharmacological agents, the aim of the present paper is to provide the reader with an updated survey on their rational use in subjective tinnitus.

Data source and selection
A comprehensive review of English-written MED-LINE results was retrieved using the following queries: "Tinnitus AND neurobiology"; "Tinnitus AND therapy"; "Tinnitus AND antidepressant"; "Tinnitus AND SSRI"; "Tinnitus AND venlafaxine"; "Tinnitus AND duloxetine"; "Tinnitus AND bupropion"; "Tinnitus AND tricyclic"; "Tinnitus AND benzodiazepine"; "Tinnitus AND lithium"; "Tinnitus AND antiepileptic"; "Tinnitus AND anxiety"; "Tinnitus AND depression"; "Tinnitus AND bipolar disorder"; "Tinnitus AND schizophrenia"; "Tinnitus AND ADHD"; and "Tinnitus AND dementia". Results were kept within a January 1990–January 2010 time limit. Finally, meta-analysis and randomized clinical trials (RCTs) data were prioritized when available.

Pathophysiology
The changes in the auditory nervous system, especially at the dorsal (DCN) and ventral cochlear nucleus (VCN) underpinning tinnitus are often represented by a reduction in the inhibitory rather than an excitatory input, resulting in a shift in the balance between inhibition and excitation.

Deprivation of input may cause neural plasticity to change the relationship between inhibition and excitation and protein synthesis5 and finally, impact on neurotransmission—especially at the DCN, the inferior colliculus (IC), together with the primary and secondary auditory cortices—eventually affecting the thalamic and dorsal cortex transmission, the amygdala, and other structures.6 The rerouting of information may cause structures of the central nervous system (CNS) that are not normally involved in processing auditory information to become activated by sound stimulation (ie, the abnormal involvement of the nonclassical–nonspecific/extralemniscal–pathways). Yet to date, no univocal or exhaustive appreciation of tinnitus determining neural abnormalities has been reached; with its pathophysiological correlates still remaining a debated issue.

Among others, the following evidence and hypotheses have been postulated:7

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Peripheral auditory system


Spontaneous otoacoustic emissions
Small acoustic signals presumed to be generated by the electromotile activity of the outer hair cells (OHCs) of the cochlea and propagated into the external auditory canal may be abnormally perceived as tinnitus.8



Edge theory
Increased spontaneous activity in the edge area, which represents a transition from normal OHCs on the apical side of a lesion to OHCs toward the basal side that are missing or altered, may contribute to tinnitus perception.9



Discordant theory
The discordant dysfunction of damaged OHCs and intact inner hair cells (IHCs) may result in the disinhibition and increased spontaneous activity of neurons in the DCNs, that receive excitation from IHCs, but with no inputs from the damaged OHCs, therefore playing a role in tinnitus phenomenon.10

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Central auditory system


The dorsal cochlear nucleus
Hyperactivity by disinhibition or plastic readjustments of the DCN, triggered for instance by OHC damage or a reduction in auditory nerve input have been supposed to concur in tinnitus genesis.11



Auditory plasticity theory
Damage to the cochlea enhances neural activity in the central auditory pathway, such as the IC and the temporal lobe of the auditory association cortex (similar to the phantom limb sensation in amputees).12



Crosstalk theory
The compression from blood vessels or a tumor on auditory nerve causes ephaptic coupling between nerve fibers, which may result in the phase-locking of spontaneous activity of groups of auditory neurons that may be perceived as sound.13

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Somatosensory system
Abnormal DCN activity could also be influenced by the stimulation of the somatosensory system. Furthermore, pain signals from the cochlea carried by the cochlear C fibers may be interpreted by the CNS as tinnitus.14

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Neurotransmitters
It has been postulated that numerous cochlear neurotransmitters play a role in tinnitus sensation.

GABA
It is known that the number of gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) immunoreactive neurons in the auditory nuclei decreases with age;15 together with its concentration and release, the glutamatergic acid decarboxylase activity (the rate-limiting enzyme in the formation of GABA), GABAB receptor binding and the presynaptic GABA releasing terminals availability.16 This trend has been postulated to be a higher risk of noise-induced hearing loss as an important tinnitus etiological factor, especially in older men17, and has prompted both researchers and clinicians to consider GABAergic modulators as a candidate therapy for tinnitus patients. Anxiolytic benzodiazepines (BDZ), as well as anti-epileptic drugs that enhance GABAAreceptors (including those used as mood-stabilizers); or GABAB agonists (eg, baclofen, a drug used for multiple sclerosis and proposed for morphine withdrawal syndrome18) have all been suggested both for animal and human models of tinnitus.19,20 Finally, while anxiety per se does not produce tinnitus, it may strongly exacerbate its perception, and may be modulated by GABAergic neurotransmission enhancers with the final result of tinnitus relief.

Serotonin
Serotonergic (5-HTergic) modulation (eg, by salicylate administration) has been reported to provoke tinnitus,21 although human genetic studies on the regulatory region of the 5-HT transporter (5-HTTLPR) SLC6A4 gene failed to show any significant effect on the susceptibility to chronic tinnitus, thus indicating an indirect, rather than a direct, modulating role of 5-HT in tinnitus etiology and CNS-adaptive mechanisms.22 Modulation of 5-HT is a core mechanism of a very large number of routinely prescribed drugs including the selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor (SSRI) antidepressants, thus their putative role in increasing the sensation of tinnitus should therefore be taken into account.23 Nonetheless, the biological theory of depression provides a rationale for the association of emotional distress and chronic tinnitus determined by the respective impact of dysfunctional neural reorganization on limbic and auditory structures,24 with a specific role of brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) in promoting plasticity-induced recovery, has been postulated in depressive states,25 which could make some affective (or anxiety) disordered individuals more genetically prone26 or stress-vulnerable27 for developing tinnitus.

Dopamine
Tinnitus perception takes place in prefrontal, primary temporal and temporoparietal associative areas, as well in the limbic system. Dopamine (DA) neurotransmission acts through prefrontal, primary temporal, temporoparietal associative areas and the limbic system. Tinnitus perception and DA-ergic pathway share the same cerebral structures, which control attention, stress, emotions, learning, memory and motivated behavior. Distress from tinnitus emanates from these same cerebral functions, and could therefore be potentially modulated by either DA-blockers (ie, typical and atypical antipsychotics) or DA-agonists (eg, buproprion, a norepinephrine/DA reuptake inhibitor, antidepressant and by many anti-Parkinson drugs such as levodopa, bromocriptine, pramipexole and others).

Glutamate
N-methyl d-aspartate (NMDA) glutamate receptor is most likely involved in tinnitus, as it is involved in many forms of central neuropathic pain.28 Specifically, it has been shown that acetylsalicylic acid activates cochlear NMDA receptors29 and that the use of NMDA-antagonists at the round window abolishes tinnitus,29 while NMDA receptor agonists may induce tinnitus-like behaviors.30 Memantine, used to treat neuropathic pain and mild to moderate forms of Alzheimer's disease,31 blocks NMDA transmission in hair cells (the same as salicylate acts upon)32 also modulating the cholinergic transmission. Acamprosate, a drug acting as both a NDMA-blocker and GABA-enhancer is used for alcohol withdrawal maintenance,33 recently proposed as an (augmentation) strategy to improve cognitive depressive symptoms,34 has recently been trialed for the management tinnitus with some success.35 Salicylate amplifies cochlear NMDA-mediated responses but has little or no effect on α-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionic (AMPA) glutamate receptor and glutamatergic kainite-mediated responses.36 AMPA receptors (AMPAR) are both glutamate receptors and cation channels that are integral to plasticity and synaptic transmission at many postsynaptic membranes. AMPA receptors mediate the excitotoxic effect of excessive noise trauma, leading to excessive amounts of glutamate in the synaptic cleft that results in neurite loss,37 and are also able to upregulate themselves through plastic changes.38 Application of NMDA antagonists onto the round window membrane abolishes tinnitus, even in animals receiving treatment with the 5-HT2C anxiogenic agent 1-(-3-chlorophenyl) piperazine (mCPP),39 suggesting NMDA blocking, even for depressed or chronically anxious tinnitus patients.40

Ion channel and others
The inner cells of the cochlea have only the L-type of calcium (Ca2+) channels, that are involved in the regulation of in situ glutamate release and are blocked by salicylate.41 In the IC, the current through the L-type channels, although unable to directly trigger the neurotransmitter release, contributes to GABAergic transmission by activating the second messenger system and/or by increasing the intracellular Ca2+connection;42 while salicylate also blocks the outward and delayed rectifier potassium (K+) channels in rat IC, hence decreasing the GABAergic transmission.43

Glycine receptors (whose number significantly decreases with age in DCN) along with acetylcholine muscarinic and nicotinic receptors (whose number also decreases with age in the VCN and IC) antagonism has also been investigated for their implication in the genesis of tinnitus44,45 and may lead to new pharmacological strategies (such as with varenicline, a smoking-cessation drug and often prescribed to psychiatric patients46) in the treatment of tinnitus.

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Psychopharmacological treatment
Many drugs, including psychopharmacological agents, are routinely employed in the treatment of tinnitus (Table 2). Such drugs could be prescribed as both a potential therapy for tinnitus, or just to patients with psychopathological problems who may also present with tinnitus, or to patients who may develop tinnitus (possibly as iatrogenic phenomenon).

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Table 2

Main pharmacological agents for subjective tinnitus
Antidepressants
Baldo and colleagues performed a meta-analysis in 2006 on tricyclic antidepressants (TCAs) and SSRIs, which questioned substantially their efficacy in the treatment of tinnitus, although most evidence may have been invalidated by methodological bias or the reliance on single case reports.47 In 2007, an analysis of four RCTs by Robinson found that higher doses of SSRIs and TCAs appear to work for tinnitus patients who also exhibit depression and anxiety48 or insomnia,49 both of which are frequent comorbidities among chronic otolaryngic patients.50 What appears to be irreversible disability of otologic origin may, in part, be a reversible disability of psychiatric origin when treated51,52 with drugs proven to be effective antidepressants such as nortriptyline.53

Some TCAs have proven not to be effective for tinnitus,54,55 or were even less effective than placebo56(or possibly being associated with tinnitus onset with high doses of clomipramine).57

A possible dose effect may exist as lower doses have sometimes been related to tinnitus onset,58,59 even when the same agents were reported as being effective60 (as in non-TCA heterocyclic antidepressants such as trazodone61 and mianserin).62

Sertraline was found to be more effective than placebo for severe refractory tinnitus cases63 although its discontinuation was associated with tinnitus onset.64 Other SSRIs (eg, paroxetine) provided no significant improvement for nondepressed patients65 or even exacerbated tinnitus (eg, fluoxetine).66

While newer antidepressants have not been investigated as thoroughly as SSRIs and TCAs, little data on their role in the treatment of tinnitus has been reported and which has sometimes led to inhomogeneous evidence.

Serotonin norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors (SNRIs) withdrawal has seldom been associated with tinnitus (both for venlafaxine67,68 and duloxetine69), while the norepinephrine dopamine reuptake inhibitor (NDRI) bupropion may mimic a transient ischemic attack that may induce tinnitus,70,71 that is most likely due to DA-ergic enhancment.

Antipsychotics
Although pharmacological treatment is well-established for tinnitus in clinical practice systematic, rigorous literature evidence on antipsychotics is lacking, especially with regard to recently introduced atypical compounds.

Also, it is sometimes difficult to separate tinnitus from psychotic symptoms, thus increasing the cases of schizophrenic patients who may receive antipsychotics for tinnitus-like sensations or hallucinations.72

To date the most accurately investigated antipsychotic medication for tinnitus is sulpiride.

A 2007 prospective, randomized, single blinded, placebo-controlled study by Lopez-Gonzalez on sulpiride plus hydroxyzine (an antihistamine derivate and subcortical sedative attenuating the limbic system) indicated the efficacy of the antipsychotic drug in reducing the sensation of tinnitus, possibly mediated by the auditolimbic D2 DA-ergic modulation.73 An RCT investigation from the same group also reported the efficacy of sulpiride in association with melatonin (a pineal hormone with anti-DA-ergic actions) in attenuating tinnitus sensation.74 Remarkably, both studies used low doses of sulpiride (up to 50 mg/8 hours) and this should be taken into account when using (atypical) antipsychotics, since the presynaptic autoinhibitory D2-blockade should lead to DA release instead of reduction (as evidenced by high dose-mediated postsynaptic D2 heteroreceptors blockade).

The melatonergic role has also been considered for associations with antipsychotics other than sulpiride,75and is worthy of further investigation, even for other classes of drugs (ie, the newly introduced antidepressant agomelatine, acting as metallothionen-1(MT1)/MT2 melatonergic agonist and 5-HT2C-ergic antagonist).76

Mood stabilizers
Many antiepileptics used as mood stabilizers have been considered for the treatment of tinnitus, although almost all available evidence does not come from systematic investigations and therefore do not lead to an univocal consensus.

Among others, carbamazepine has been proposed both as stand-alone treatment for subjective tinnitus77 or with lidocaine,78 salicylate,79 or steroid80 augmentation/switch option, while limited-sampled reports indicate its potential induction of objective tinnitus (by auditory nerve vascular compression).81,82

Valproate, an another popular antiepileptic/mood-stabilizer, has also been investigated as a candidate for tinnitus therapy.83,84 However a singlecase has been reported suggesting its potential role in inducing tinnitus (eventually by magnesium metabolism impairment),85,86 with tinnitus eventually being misinterpreted as psychotic symptom.87 The only RCT evidence for lamotrigine concluded it to be ineffective for tinnitus.88

To date, gabapentin is the most thoroughly investigated antiepileptic drug for tinnitus. A placebo-controlled trial by Bauer and colleagues reported its effectiveness in reducing subjective or objective tinnitus, especially in individuals with associated acoustic trauma.89 However, more recent, placebo-controlled studies using high doses of gabapentin (1800 mg/day and 900–3600 mg/day respectively) have disproved its efficacy versus placebo.9092 Remarkably, no systematic studies on the use of pregabalin (a gabapentin-related GABA-modulator plus alpha (2) delta calcium channel antagonism) have been reported to date. However, evidence from the literature on tinnitus relief by CA2+ antagonists93 suggests that an investigation into applicability in the treatment of tinnitus is warranted.41

Lithium, a proven nonantiepileptic mood-stabilizer, has not been systematically assessed for its suitability for the treatment of tinnitus, although its inhibitory effect on the phosphoinositide cascade, maximized in case of over-the-counter assumption, may lead to vasodilatory shock as well as to hearing deficiency.94

Finally, while GABA transaminase inhibition is considered a basic antiepileptic feature, antimanic actions seem to be independent of it, with recent acquisition focusing on the role of histone deacetylases95 and the glycogen synthase kiase-3 remodeling and synapsin I clustering.96 This consideration contributes to explain why the mood stabilizers class includes so much different compounds, whereas the GABA modulation is just part of the therapeutic portfolio, thus making particularly difficult to investigate a single action hypothesized to modulate tinnitus perception.

Sedative-hypnotics
Benzodiazepines (BDZs) and other sedative–hypnotics agents are among the most prescribed drugs worldwide and the pivotal role of BDZ receptor distribution in severe, intractable tinnitus has been studied by Daftary and colleagues.97 It is therefore unsurprising that BDZ GABA-A-ergic modulation has repeatedly been considered for treating severe disabling tinnitus of predominantly cochlear origin.98

Although systematic investigations are lacking, the majority of evidence suggests their potential role in tinnitus management, especially for those patients presenting with high levels of comorbid anxiety. Placebo-controlled trials for alprazolam,99 midazolam,100 and clonazepam101 have produced the most promising results (remarkably, these drugs share the short half/average-life and the pro-5-HT-ergic features). Clonazepam has also been reported as being effective for the treatment of pulsatile tinnitus when associated with beta-blocker agents,102 although less effective than baclofen (a muscle relaxer and an antispasmodic GABA-B-agonist agent).103 While no systematic trials have been conducted on the long half-life BDZs, it has been observed that the chance of protracted tinnitus due to abrupt discontinuation of diazepam (30 mg/day long-term treatment)104 or oxazepam105 is most likely due to a receptor upregulation phenomena.

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Conclusions
Tinnitus pharmacological therapies include a wide range of proposed medicaments. Among others, zinc,106 melatonin,75 lidocaine,107 botulinum toxin,108 antioxidants minerals, vitamins, ginkgo biloba, and other herbal remedies,109 have been considered in the treatment of tinnitus.

Indeed, psychological (eg, cognitive behavioral therapy) and retraining approaches have been suggested repeatedly as preferred integrative or stand-alone treatments.110 However, psychopharmacological agents are often considered choices as well, although it is difficult to assess their efficacy.

In fact, major limits influence the validity of available literature evidence. Few studies follow RCT standards and most reports rely on small-sized samples or are just single-case reports, with the literature evidence considered by this review relying on MEDLINE.

Also clinical diagnosis of tinnitus are extremely heterogeneous and could be "influenced" by concomitant comorbidities/therapies, especially in case of anxious and depressed patients. These considerations inevitably limit the comprehension of the underpinning neurobiological substrates of tinnitus, further reducing the chance of developing selective pharmacological agents.

Nonetheless, while psychopharmacological agents include a heterogeneous, broad number of compounds, the rational acknowledgment of studies in the current literature and hypothesized biological causes should be considered mandatory in order to avoid iatrogenic phenomena or to effectively consider the psychopharmacological treatment strategy.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2898164/
 
Nonetheless, while psychopharmacological agents include a heterogeneous, broad number of compounds, the rational acknowledgment of studies in the current literature and hypothesized biological causes should be considered mandatory in order to avoid iatrogenic phenomena or to effectively consider the psychopharmacological treatment strategy.
Danny no one understands all this stuff - if you have something to say then please can you say it in laymans language and explain cos for me at least and I am sure many others, reading through all this stuff is just too difficult...and ends up not being read at all.....lol so please explain what you understand from all this stuff....thanks
 
Danny no one understands all this stuff - if you have something to say then please can you say it in laymans language and explain cos for me at least and I am sure many others, reading through all this stuff is just too difficult...and ends up not being read at all.....lol so please explain what you understand from all this stuff....thanks

Well, I'm not rewriting all that, I'll be there all day.
 
Well, I'm not rewriting all that, I'll be there all day.
didnt ask you to rewrite it - that is the same as pasting it. I asked you to explain what you had posted. So you read it and therefore you have obviously understood it so therefore was asking you to explain in short and relatively easy and quick detail what it says. SORRY but I dont have a science background and it is too difficult for me and maybe many others to understand it. As you understand it - please can you explain in brief what it says...thanks
 
didnt ask you to rewrite it - that is the same as pasting it. I asked you to explain what you had posted. So you read it and therefore you have obviously understood it so therefore was asking you to explain in short and relatively easy and quick detail what it says. SORRY but I dont have a science background and it is too difficult for me and maybe many others to understand it. As you understand it - please can you explain in brief what it says...thanks

There's a lot of information there honestly it's be near enough the same wording.
 
Anyway, the author asked for our opinions not a piece of encyclopedia..@hope , my opinion is : stay away from heavy drugs like benzos, trobalt, keppr, but I wouldn't fear homeopatic stuff. You can't be afraid because one person heard that one person went to a hospital : you don't know what this person took and what was his health condition. For sure herbal stuff can greatly influence our bodies, old cultures have been using them for thousands of years whereas we prefer to poison ourselves with chemicals - ok, sometimes they cannot be replaced, but you're yound as well as your T is, so indeed, I'd wait, but you can always take some zinc , magnesium, b vits, c vit, ginko biloba - can't hurt. Chances are you will feel better knowing that you take something that might help your brain work better. We tell our brains it does sth wrong ? Because it does! it produces blasted phantom sounds so it's definitely not working fine..
 
I have a reasonable laymen's grasp of all the material posted here, and I think it's a needless distraction that doesn't in any way address Hope's question. Hope asked pretty plainly if there is any risk of these drugs damaging the nervous system; Danny has replied with several pages about the theories of how tinnitus arises chemically and what impact classes of drugs might have. None of that attempts to address Hope's question.

@Hope2015 , the bottom line is that all psychoactive drugs carry some risk of causing permanent or long term, unwanted changes in the way the nervous system operates. For any given drug, if you comb through the literature, you will find "normal" side effects experienced by a large number of people, and then you will find case reports of outliers, who had an unusually strong negative reaction to the drug. For instance, in the case of Trobalt, there is an account in the medical literature of someone who lost the ability to urinate without a catheter (permanently) following Trobalt use.

Keppra appears to have less extreme physiological reactions, but there are many, many accounts in the literature of people having profoundly negative psychiatric reactions to it, in some cases requiring hospitalization.

The bottom line is that there's no such thing as a 'safe' drug; anything that has the potential to change the way your body/mind works, carries some risk with it. This isn't limited to drugs, either -- as much as I am gung-ho about exercise and meditation as a reasonable way to try to handle tinnitus, exercise can cause muscle/joint problems, and there are a number of reports of people who only developed tinnitus as a result of intense meditation.
Hope2015 said:
He said everytime you take meds or something else, you are telling your brain that is doing something wrong and it can't get better...
His conclusion was I shouldn't try anything just wait for my brain to do it's job and he is sure that t will go away.
I think the first part of this is a simplification: it sounds like he's talking about homeostasis, which is the body's tendency to self-regulate and keep itself in a "stable" state. This can have unwanted effects with regard to drugs: for instance benzos, which are very calming in the short term, work by increasing the efficiency of the neurotransmitter GABA in the brain. This is fine if you only take a few doses, but if you take it every day for months/years, the brain responds by decreasing its GABA output, which stands a good chance of making your original problems worse.

As to whether or not your T will "go away", no one can really tell you that. It does happen in many cases, though it becomes less likely the longer it sticks around. However, the vast majority of people with tinnitus, do not find it to be a life-changing horrible malady. I know a number of people with tinnitus in my day to day life, some of whom have it loudly enough that they can hear it in all environments, over traffic, airplanes, etc... none of them are especially distressed by it, none of them have googled it, and none of them are on this forum.
 

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