Tinnitus is damage to the inner ear nerves which sense sound. Usually, the easiest way to damage them is prolonged exposure to loud noises or music. Concerts, airplane engines, and even headphones can damage nerves when loud enough. When damaged, the nerves create either a constant or patterned ringing in your ear. This ringing can dissipate if no actual damage is done. However, actual tinnitus is usually virtually permanent. Overtime, it can result in high stress, hearing trouble, and, in the worst cases, insanity.
The noise can drive people nuts. Get it treated and try everything. Just let your Doc know if you try homeopathic remedies. He can't tell you no, but he needs to know everything you do.
Vitus Tinnitus was created in 1997.
Sadly he does have tinnitus:(
American Tinnitus Association was created in 1971.
Tinnitus Sanctus was created on 2008-11-14.
I don't believe there is any age limit for Tinnitus.
International Tinnitus Journal was created in 1995.
Tinnitus is a ringing, buzzing, or roaring sound in one or both ears.
Mastoiditis can cause hearing loss which may result in tinnitus.
Tinnitus is a symptom itself. There are two types of tinnitus 1. Objective tinnitus ( which can be heard by your doctor with a special listening device) 2. Subjective tinnitus ( heard only by the patient) Tinnitus is the perception of sounds by a person that are not in the outside world. Approximately 30 million people in the US suffer from it daily. It is treatable in 90% of cases by ENT physicians. For more info about tinnitus go to: <a href="http://theheardoc.com">Hearing Loss: Facts and Fiction</a>
It is possible, but don't worry about it too much, it could be temporary tinnitus common in younger ages. it just depends on how the tinnitus was triggered.
Yes, hearing aids can relieve tinnitus if it is caused by presbycusis. If presbycusis is not the cause of the tinnitus, hearing aids will not help at all.
The proper term for ringing buzzing or roaring in the ears is Tinnitus. The proper medical way to pronounce it is TIN-nit-us, not tin-I-tus (the second pronunciation would denote an inflammation, which tinnitus is not). There are many causes of tinnitus, but in general it is caused by a disruption in the auditory pathway to the brain. The brain tries to interpret the random misfiring that this disruption causes, but it cannot. The hearing center of the brain (temporal lobe) sends the signal to the thinking part of your brain (frontal cortex) to help it out. When it reaches the frontal cortex is when you first perceive it. Hench, you then hear Tinnitus.