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Tinnitus triggered by stress

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Dave C.

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Jul 19, 2009, 11:15:09 PM7/19/09
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I recently noticed that the a short period of stress triggers
tinnitus, and if it lasts a while, some depression will set in.

Might there be any possible remedy that could tame this a bit. I am
aware that certain foods also trigger it, but the stress trigger is a
new one for me.

Regards,

Dave C.

Message has been deleted

geoff

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Jul 21, 2009, 6:28:37 PM7/21/09
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I found that identifying my LF Hum as being in fact tinnitus was sufficient
in itself to alleviate things. Not totally, but a bit.

My HF tinnitus maybe stress related, but is more persistant.

geoff


Dave C.

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Jul 21, 2009, 7:15:28 PM7/21/09
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On Jul 21, 12:33 pm, Susan <su...@nothanks.org> wrote:
> x-no-archive: yes
> I don't know if taking it after the fact will help, but
> phosphatidylserine blunts the cortisol stress response and definitely
> helps with the stress related mood problem, and may help with the T.
>
> Susan

Thanks, Susan, I'll check it out.

Dave C.

fyf...@gmail.com

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Jul 29, 2009, 9:50:52 PM7/29/09
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Whatever causes the tinnitus is hard to find out, and chances are that
you may never find it out. That said, the first thing you should do
is to try to alleviate your symptoms with improved blood circulation.
The latter can be done using intravenous injection or medication. The
simplest and the cheapest way is Ginko Biloba. The last thing you
should do is to let your tinnitus get 'old'. Once it got old and got
to the full-fledged onset, you would wish you had not been born!

What have you got to lose by trying it?

�Bluto

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Jul 30, 2009, 12:20:04 PM7/30/09
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On Wed, 29 Jul 2009 18:50:52 -0700 (PDT), "fyf...@gmail.com"
<fyf...@gmail.com> wrote:

>On 7??20??, ????11??15??, "Dave C." <cardare...@c4.net> wrote:
>> I recently noticed that the a short period of stress triggers
>> tinnitus, and if it lasts a while, some depression will set in.
>>
>> Might there be any possible remedy that could tame this a bit. I am
>> aware that certain foods also trigger it, but the stress trigger is a
>> new one for me.
>>
>> Regards,
>>
>> Dave C.
>
>Whatever causes the tinnitus is hard to find out, and chances are that
>you may never find it out. That said, the first thing you should do
>is to try to alleviate your symptoms with improved blood circulation.

Same old song and dance eh fyfoolpoon?

>The latter can be done using intravenous injection or medication. The
>simplest and the cheapest way is Ginko Biloba.

IV for T...yeah right bozo! GB, sure it cures everything to a fool
like you.

>The last thing you should do is to let your tinnitus get 'old'. Once it
>got old and got to the full-fledged onset, you would wish you had not
>been born!

More bullcrap! I don't know of anyone with your so called "old" T
that wishes they had not been born. Most people face it and accept
it. In your mind is where you can do the best to overcome the
nuisance of T. Be glad you don't have something worse, terminal!

>
>What have you got to lose by trying it?

Time, money then feeling like a fool by doing what some self professed
hong kong newsgroup doctor(fyfoolpoon) suggests.


Message has been deleted

jdp

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Aug 7, 2009, 7:36:01 PM8/7/09
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I used Trans-Derm Scop patches for a few years. They reduced the
tinnitus to a whisper. For about 6 weeks it went away entirely while
wearing the patch behind my tinnitus-affected ear. I wore them 3 days
on and then 3 days not wearing them, then repeated the cycle. I wrote
about it in the ATA journal and was deluged with inquiries about
them. They helped a lot of people with tinnitus. The patches are
usually prescribed for sea sickness and have some side effects that
include drowsiness, dry eyes, and light sensitivity to sunlight as
well as dry mouth. However these were easy to counteract and the
relief I got from the tinnitus was a real blessing, I got my life back.

�Bluto

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Aug 8, 2009, 9:55:33 AM8/8/09
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On Fri, 7 Aug 2009 16:36:01 -0700 (PDT), jdp <k4...@bellsouth.net>
wrote:

What hogwash! Why not put a magnet behind your ear too. And swap
with GB. If you think this is helping you then you certainly are not
very afflicted with T. Oh, T took you life away? Maybe esophgeal
cancer will but certainly not T.

jdp

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Aug 9, 2009, 3:29:55 PM8/9/09
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> cancer will but certainly not T.- Hide quoted text -

Not hogwash, it has helped me and others. Scopolamine has also been
researched for tinntius relief, check the ATA journal.

�Bluto

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Aug 10, 2009, 8:30:52 AM8/10/09
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On Sun, 9 Aug 2009 12:29:55 -0700 (PDT), jdp <k4...@bellsouth.net>
wrote:


No matter what, there will always be those who claimed it helped them.
Its total hogwash. If it helps you you don't have T.

msw

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May 22, 2010, 1:40:42 AM5/22/10
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Get away from whatever job or situation that created the stress; especially
if your an older guy and in a high stress job or atmosphere. I never had any
tinnitus or stress iissues until I got a job as a rater for the VA Regional
Office where we rate disabilities of veterans-and they want extreme speed
and output of claims from "raters" people with no medical or legal
background to rate disabilities a 100 at breakneck speed with a bizarre set
of quality level, and it drove me to getting tinnitus and gave another guy a
heart attack--plus it shows how really concerned they are about the quality
of disablility compensation they are giving veterans-- I left that job a
week ago, my tinnitus already seems to be calming down.

"Dave C." <carda...@c4.net> wrote in message
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Josepi

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May 22, 2010, 4:37:12 PM5/22/10
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Nice to hear about somebody's success with that... hurray!


"msw" <mwa...@peoplepc.com> wrote in message
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