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Tinnitus Information You Need to Hear About

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Tinitus is a condition that is very complex. This site is essential on various dental issues revolving around TMJ (temporomandibular joint), jaw poppiing, causes and treatment of grinding teeth or bruxism, and the possible treatments therewith.

So, while I will try to hit upon tinnitus symptoms, treatment of tinnitus and the TMJ and tinnitus related connection, it will not be completely comprehensive although it should be adequate to give you the information you need -- and the solutions available to you.

So, What is Tinnitus?

Tinnitus is condition where in a person experiences a constant ringing in one or both of their ears. It is the perception of sound within the human ear in the absence of corresponding external sound.

It is a nonspecific symptom of hearing disorder characterized by the sensation of buzzing, ringing, clicking, pulsations, and other noises in the ear. It can be very annoying as it's uncontrollable and happens unexpectedly. Just what causes it? Well, there are many different tinnitus causes.

Some of these can be prevented. However, there are times when tinnitus just occurs spontaneously without warning. This has happened to me. Needless to say, if you are experiencing tinnitus, the best thing that you should do is to have your ears examined by your licensed doctor. This will help you determine what is causing tinnitus. 

Tinnitus can go along with other conditions connected to the ears of which some require a doctor’s evaluation and cure.  Although there is no recognized successful pharmacological therapy, there may be other options like a professional quality mouth guard.

Tinnitus Symptoms

Obviously in order to determine if your TMJ and tinnitus symptoms are related,  you need to know what the symptoms of tinnitus are. I've touched upon this a little bit already.

Fundamentally, you'll experience a ringing sound in your ears of great or lesser intensity. In some cases the sound may different like ticking, knocking, or a buzzing or a hissing (mine has been a hissing/buzzing as odd as that sounds). Regardless of what the sound is if you are hearing things in your ears, this is a pretty good sign that you have tinnitus.

Now, if you recognize the symptoms of tinnitus along with a predictable soreness around the area where your upper and lower jaw are and there is a a clicking sound when you are chewing, that is a sign of TMJ. Thus, the tinnitus may -- and I say may -- be caused by the underlying TMJ issue.

These symptoms should be observed and analyzed so as to determine whether the tinnitus you have is of the objective or subjective type. Let's get more specific.

tinnitusIn objective tinnitus, the sound being perceived by the sufferer due to an underlying external cause, such as muscle spasms. This may be the cause of the attendant clicking or snapping sounds in the ear, which is undesirable.

A common symptom is when the patient has a sensation of hearing one’s own heartbeat. This is called pulsatile or vascular tinnitus, as the noise or sound is indeed based on activity in the blood vessels such as increased blood flow, for instance. This is common, actually, and again has been something I've had as part of my own tinnitus.

So, in essence, the tinnitus Symptoms may have the following characteristics; Ringing, buzzing, roaring, hissing or whistling sounds which are Intermittent, continuous, or pulsatile quality with the same or varying intensity. These sounds could be of a single or multiple tones and they can are intermittent.

Treatment of Tinnitus

Let's briefly talk about the treatment of tinnitus. It may be as simple as removing excess earwax. It could also be eliminated by the terminating of the use of pharmaceutical medications that can cause the condition.  

If there is a vascular disorder, surgery may be needed to correct vascular disorders, which can incite tinnitus. Some other options include hearing aids, noise suppression devices, and similar approaches, which are utilized to mask the the tinnitus-induced sounds.

Music therapy, in which a patient listens to music that lacks notes equivalent in frequency to the ringing sound the patient hears, has been shown to alleviate the perceived loudness of chronic tinnitus in some individuals.

A woman in Canada, one Patricia Joudry, experienced severe tinnitus and was able to cure it with special frequencies underlaid or overlaid by classical music. I have the tapes. Her tapes are called, "Sound Therapy for the Walkman."

In severe cases, drugs such as alprazolam and amitriptyline may be prescribed to reduce the symptoms of tinnitus.

Another treatment may be chiropractic manipulation of the temporalis masseter muscles in the jaw for a few weeks. It has been reported that this treatment may relief. Such chiropractic manipulation relieves the pain, helps treat the ringing in the ears, and can help those who lose sleep due to the tinnitus as well.

One rather interesting method I've heard of is simply putting a pencil in your mouth so that it extends through the mouth. This has the effect of relaxing the mouth or specifically the jaw muscles. The tension of jaw muscles can cause tinnitus. I've tried this and it works.

Another treatment being used is cranial osteopathy, which uses a hands-on, gentle structural adjustment. It does this in order to deal with TMJ, headaches, and facial pain, vertigo, and tinnitus and ear infections.

Another simple and inexpensive option is a good, quality mouth guard. As a TMJ dentist, I can tell you this can work in many cases.

TMJ & Tinnitus

TMJ and tinnitus can be difficult to deal with but there are treatments that help as mentioned above.

TMJ and tinnitus are associated with each other because tinnitus is one of the symptoms of TMJ syndrome.

The onset of TMJ and tinnitus symptoms can mean that the patient feels a weird sensation in their ears. It might take the doctor some time before they can find the right diagnosis but the monitoring has to continue especially if the symptoms are getting worse. Moving your jaws might alter the sounds which you are hearing. That might indicate that the problem is actually related to muscular tension. There is a therapeutic program that is specifically designed to deal with this problem in the short term.

While TMJ and tinnitus symptoms are often related, one should not assume that this is the reason you have tinnitus-like symptoms such as buzzing or ringing in your ears. There are many who have one condition and not the other so be careful. 

Even if you do have TMJ, the tinnitus might still be caused by something else. In truth, tinnitus could be a symptom of a serious medical issue. So, you should talk to your doctor just in case aabout your symptoms first. This is a wise precaution as it ensures you don't have a serious problem.

The connection between TMJ and tinnitus may lie in the fact that the muscles, joints and ligaments that are affected with this condition are just in front of the ear.  Thus, nerves and blood vessels connected to the ear are affected.  Tinnitus is a tangential or asymptomatic problem and not a primary problem. Well, wait, that is not entirely true. It can be the primary health problem. I simply am saying it could be asymptomatic. Anyway, while the exact cause of tinnitus is not yet fully understood by medical science, experts theorize that the sound tinnitus generates is caused by the malfunctioning of certain parts of the ear that lack the inadequate blood supply to work properly. 

It is not unheard of that TMJ and tinnitus symptoms will pre-empt certain neurological disorders. For example multiple sclerosis might give its fist signs in the ear. That is an example of why many think it's important to take these symptoms very seriously.

Now, in conclusion when it is present, associated or accompanied with TMJ problems, there is an excellent chance that you can cure or eliminate the ringing and TMD problems, the ringing will go away almost every single time! So, that's good news for you if you have ringing in ears, because TMJ pain is very treatable, which means most likely your ringing in ears will be gone as well.

But, you don't have to have TMJ symptoms for ringing in the ears to be caused by TMJ causes.

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I hope this tinnitus webpage has been helpful for you.

Yours in health,
David Spainhower, D.D.S.