I have this horrible buzz on the left side of my head for the last
7months. CatScan and MRI are negative. While walking or even chewing
there is an additional high pitch bell-like sound coming from the same
area. ENT said its Tinnitus and there's nothing he do for it. The last
7 months have been horrible. I tried Ginko- no help. Any help would be
really appreciated.
The New Guy - 04 Apr 2007 21:17 GMT
> I have this horrible buzz on the left side of my head for the last
> 7months. CatScan and MRI are negative. While walking or even chewing
> there is an additional high pitch bell-like sound coming from the same
> area. ENT said its Tinnitus and there's nothing he do for it. The last
> 7 months have been horrible. I tried Ginko- no help. Any help would be
> really appreciated.
Look back on the older messages here. Make sure you have good
flexibility in your neck. Neck injuries or stiffness seems to be
often common among T sufferers. Often T is reduces or vanishes after
lying in a tub of hot water. Maybe the heat relaxes the neck muscles.
Also, look for sounds that might trigger or aggravate your T.
Elly Byrne - 04 Apr 2007 22:08 GMT
There is some kind of tension in the neck and/or back area. No doctor
ever looks here, and the scans do not cover this area either.
Have a look at: http://eebee.net/TinnitusIsaPainintheNeck.html
Elly
-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
Discovery consists of looking at the same thing
as everyone else and thinking something different.
Roger von Oech
http://eebee.net/
>I have this horrible buzz on the left side of my head for the last
>7months. CatScan and MRI are negative. While walking or even chewing
>there is an additional high pitch bell-like sound coming from the same
>area. ENT said its Tinnitus and there's nothing he do for it. The last
>7 months have been horrible. I tried Ginko- no help. Any help would be
>really appreciated.

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Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com
The New Guy - 04 Apr 2007 22:32 GMT
> >I have this horrible buzz on the left side of my head for the last
> >7months. CatScan and MRI are negative. While walking or even chewing
> >there is an additional high pitch bell-like sound coming from the same
> >area. ENT said its Tinnitus and there's nothing he do for it. The last
> >7 months have been horrible. I tried Ginko- no help. Any help would be
> >really appreciated.
> There is some kind of tension in the neck and/or back area. No doctor
> ever looks here, and the scans do not cover this area either.
> Have a look at: http://eebee.net/TinnitusIsaPainintheNeck.html
Elly, try to reply below the previous post as well as deleting all the
headers and other irrelevant information that tends to clutter the
message window.
Answer: Because people read from top to bottom.
Question: Why reply below the previous post?
Bringing this over to email is great too. But converting people is
quite an uphill battle.
I forgot to mention that T and Bruxism is often related. The more you
know, the better equipped you'll be.
I bet a lot more computer users have T because of holding the head in
one fixed place for hours at a time. This can't be good.
Janice - 04 Apr 2007 23:39 GMT
Blow the OCD out your ear. I can give you two good reasons to top post
for every one you can produce about bottom posting.
Use your cognitive skills and get over it. What you have done is
called "trolling"
> Elly, try to reply below the previous post as well as deleting all
> the
[quoted text clipped - 6 lines]
> Bringing this over to email is great too. But converting people is
> quite an uphill battle.
The New Guy - 05 Apr 2007 00:44 GMT
> > Elly, try to reply below the previous post as well as deleting all
> > the headers and other irrelevant information that tends to clutter
[quoted text clipped - 10 lines]
> Use your cognitive skills and get over it. What you have done is
> called "trolling"
Fine, look stupid. You'll get far less response in all newsgroups.
Bottom posting with headers eliminated makes for a cleaner, less
cluttered appearance. As this posting clearly indicates.
And bottom posting is demanded or requested in almost all newsgroups.
At least most that are computer related. Experienced people almost
always bottom post. Newbies top post because its easier. But it
encourages people to be more careless when replying. Not that I want
to get into a bottom vs top posting argument. Google bottom posting
and decide for yourself if you want clarity or a jumbled mess.
Janice - 05 Apr 2007 01:21 GMT
This is a tinnitus support group. Take your obesession elsewhere,
where people care about this matter please.
>> > Elly, try to reply below the previous post as well as deleting
>> > all
[quoted text clipped - 28 lines]
> to get into a bottom vs top posting argument. Google bottom posting
> and decide for yourself if you want clarity or a jumbled mess.
BobF - 10 Apr 2007 06:59 GMT
>This is a tinnitus support group. Take your obesession elsewhere,
>where people care about this matter please.
Actually, people do care about it in this newsgroup because it makes
following a thread more difficult. Have you ever asked yourself WHY so
few people top-post? Probably not, because it's YOU who have the
obsession with being different.

Signature
A: Dunno, maybe it's because they're stupid.
Q: Why do some people top-post?
A: Because they are REALLY STUPID!
Q: Why do some people cross-post?
fyfpoon@gmail.com - 05 Apr 2007 07:04 GMT
> I have this horrible buzz on the left side of my head for the last
> 7months. CatScan and MRI are negative. While walking or even chewing
> there is an additional high pitch bell-like sound coming from the same
> area. ENT said its Tinnitus and there's nothing he do for it. The last
> 7 months have been horrible. I tried Ginko- no help. Any help would be
> r, eally appreciated.
Bobby,
Are you living in the US or the most medically advanced country in the
whole world? And is your ENT doctor telling you that there is nothing
he can do for you? Well, Bobby, your ENT doctor is a quack.
Most doctors don't know how to treat tinnitus, and this is not an
overstatement.
Why don't you pay a visit to Dr. Murray Grossan in this group? He is
a very experienced doctor and has been treating tinnitus for years.
In particular, Murray has been invited to many places in the world to
deliver lectures, and in the process sharing his rich experiences of
treating tinnitus with the doctors of other countries.
After you try out all there is to try in the conventional school of
tinnitus treatment, you then walk into the alternative school and see
if you can get any help there. I personally would recommend you for
an acupuncture treatment as what you have got appears to be a 'nerve
tinnitus' to me, but I am not sure if i could trust the acupuncturists
when you live. Perhaps you can approach an acupuncturist where you
are and ask him or her if you can talk to his or her patients who have
benefited from the treatment.
But see Murray first and get it over with.
FP