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Medical Forum / Diseases and Disorders / Tinnitus / January 2006

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Another cause of tinnitus

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dave_nul@hotmail.com - 17 Jan 2006 19:17 GMT
Aside from exposure to loud noise, a common cause of tinnitus is TMJ
disorder (TMD), which is caused by clenching and grinding one's jaws,
often at night.  Symptoms include lost enamel, tinnitus, a feeling of
stuffiness in the ears, headaches, neck pain, and of course jaw pain
and soreness.  If any of this sounds familiar, check out the OralSensor
device (https://tmj.hypermart.net/ or urlsnip.com/671058).
KewlKiwi - 20 Jan 2006 08:22 GMT
> Aside from exposure to loud noise, a common cause of tinnitus is TMJ
> disorder (TMD), which is caused by clenching and grinding one's jaws,
> often at night.  Symptoms include lost enamel, tinnitus, a feeling of
> stuffiness in the ears, headaches, neck pain, and of course jaw pain
> and soreness.  If any of this sounds familiar, check out the OralSensor
> device (https://tmj.hypermart.net/ or urlsnip.com/671058).

That page contains no information on just what the device is supposed to
 do, or how it does it.

In short, the site assumes the reader already knows just what it is and
just wants to order one, but at the price quoted it's not likely many
people will do so without more info! (either here on on the web page)

Bob
Murray Grossan - 20 Jan 2006 16:58 GMT
On 1/20/06 12:22 AM, in article 43d09dad$1@clear.net.nz, "KewlKiwi"
<kewlkiwi@coolkiwi.com> wrote:

>> Aside from exposure to loud noise, a common cause of tinnitus is TMJ
>> disorder (TMD), which is caused by clenching and grinding one's jaws,
[quoted text clipped - 11 lines]
>
> Bob
A good way to test this is to clear any TMJ problem. Draw a straight line on
the mirror and practice relaxing your jaw so that the jaw opens in the
midline. Breathe in count four and out count six. After your TMJ is cleared
you can tell if the T clears.

Murray Grossan, M.D.
Www.ent-consult.com
Www.EarAid.info

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