Is There A Tinnitus Treatment That Works?!


Question: Is There A Tinnitus Treatment That Works!?
I am losing my mind because nothing ive tried so far worked!.!.!.Www@Answer-Health@Com


Answers:
Every body is different what works for you may not work for someone else, this is one of the biggest problems in tinnitus treatment you just cant know exactly what will help you and what wont until you try every possible option there is and this could get quite pricey!. Nasal sprays, medication, multivitamins, xanax, lasertherapy, chiropractors, surgery!.!.!. DR!. Geoff Barkers methods helped Personally a lot!.!.!.


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Not knowing what you have actually tried it is a little hard to judge because tinnitus is actually a symptom of other problems you may have not a condition unto itself!.

Many ear related conditions soemtimes associated with hearing damage but often with other issues can cause tinnitus and knowing what causes tinnitus is the first step to helping getting rid of the ringing in your ears!.
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Tinnitus: Can't stop the pealing
By Sam McManis
smcmanis@sacbee!.com
Published: Sunday, Oct!. 12, 2008 | Page 5L

Crickets chirp inside Tania Dubonnet's head sometimes!. Either that, or a distant teakettle whistle whines!. Or an electronic tone bleats!. Or a hiss of air, like that from a deflating balloon, intrudes!.

Incessant and insidious, the cacophony of noises has no on/off switch for the 58-year-old Sacramento woman who suffers from tinnitus, an inner-ear and brain condition more commonly known as "ringing in the ears!."

The affliction, often related to gradual loss of hearing, can be caused by exposure to loud noises, such as on a work site, from recreational gun shooting or listening to loud music!. But the biggest cause of tinnitus, says Dr!. Robert Dobie of the UC Davis Health System's department of otolaryngology, is aging!.

"That's also the single-largest cause of hearing loss," Dobie says!. "As you age, things break down, genetically programmable or otherwise!."

According to the American Tinnitus Association, 50 million Americans have experienced intermittent or permanent tinnitus!. Close to 12 million have chronic tinnitus and 2 million are disabled by the affliction!.

Dobie disputes this apparent widespread extent of the condition, saying a distinction must be drawn between those who have bouts of tinnitus and "accept it" and those who "suffer" from it!.

"The majority of people, even those with continuous tinnitus, find it to be trivial and unimportant," Dobie says!. "But if it's interfering with sleep, work and recreation, then they are suffering!. That number is much smaller!."

Count Dubonnet among the latter, more greatly affected, group!. Her tinnitus, she says, falls between very annoying and occasionally debilitating!.

Doctors determined that her tinnitus was triggered by her attendance at an outdoor rock concert two years ago!. She declines to mention the band or the venue, but Dubonnet certainly recalls the moment that she says changed her life!.

First, she wants people to know that, yes, she was wearing foam ear plugs at the concert!.

"But it was so loud that I took one out and was trying to roll it up tighter and that's when I felt a screech in my (right) ear," she says!. "The next day, I had an earache and sensitivity to noise!. Then I began hearing a continuous background noise!. (A few days after), I had seen a doctor and been diagnosed with tinnitus!."

It was at that initial doctor's appointment



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