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Loud Noise May Explain Ringing in the Ears

By: Karennre Lefebre

John Bloom is plagued by a problem which makes him feel the chirping of crickets right inside his head. Sometimes it is like a distant whistling sound. At other times, it seems like electronic beats. Funnier still is when it sounds like air making a hissing sound while coming out from a balloon.

It is something like a living hell for this Californian who says he constantly hears menacing sounds that cause a complete disruption of his thought process, the root cause being an ailment called tinnitus that permanently affects the inner ear and brain. For him, facing this prospect each day is awful.

This ailment is caused by sudden loud noises either in the form of loud music, loud sounds at the workplace or any other loud sounds and it causes an irreversible reduction in a person?s ability to hear. Tinnitus is caused by other factors as well, but ageing certainly aggravates it.

The American Tinnitus Association reports that the number of people in America who have had either sporadic or permanent tinnitus is about 50 million. Because of tinnitus, over 2 million people just cannot hear and about 12 million more are struggling to hear.

Bloom is in a very bad shape with regard to his hearing. In his case, tinnitus is both maddening and devastating at the same time. A detailed investigation has led his doctors to believe that the source of his tinnitus was his visit to a rock concert about two years ago.

Bloom confirms that the particular moment changed everything in his life forever, although he shies away from naming the band or the venue. He did wear foam ear plugs throughout the concert. During the concert, he once tried to remove and adjust one of them, but his unguarded ear was suddenly hit by the brutal sound.

Two symptoms were obvious almost immediately; excessive sensitivity to the slightest noise and a really bad and continuous earache.

He felt a continuous stream of noises in the background. Confirming that his disorder was indeed tinnitus did not take the doctors more than a few days.

Ultimately the ear, nose and throat specialist said what his doctor had been telling him all along, that his condition of tinnitus has no cure. Patients do take medication that reduces the intensity of ringing in the ear, but ultimately they have no option but to cope with the unfortunate situation they find themselves in.

Tinnitus patients get some relief from the noise and stress by taking controlled quantities of sleeping pills and antidepressants. Bloom?s personal preference leans towards natural remedies. Besides melatonin to assist him in sleeping well, Bloom takes a combination of zinc, magnesium and Vitamin B12 supplements.

Quite a few therapies focus on programming the brain into forgetting the tinnitus.

Neuromonics utilizes the power of electronics to generate a low-intensity white sound to reduce the effect of infuriating noises. New patients keep coming even as some of the existing ones find partial relief through effective treatment. It?s a tough ask getting rid of tinnitus completely with the current knowledge base in medical sciences.

Article Source: http://www.newsarticlessite.com

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