Currently i am in the process of changing my blood pressure regimen.
I have discovered that the buzz does change in frequency, loudness,
time cycles in accordance with the change of medicine. I wonder if T
is medicine sensitivity related.
THX
FP
To seek a tinnitus cure via changing blood pressure medications is extremely
dangerous.
Tinnitus is a subjective symptom.
Blood pressure is an objective measurement and if you can find a medication
that works, further experimentation on your own should not be attempted.
You can read and study the literature, but only the doctor in the trenches,
treating blood pressure has the experience to understand this.
I just took a two hour course on BP - not my field. I can tell you that there
is a helll of a lot out there that only experience can teach you.
One of the things i learned is that treating blood pressure can be difficult
and jumping around in medications can be dangerous.
Murray Grossan, M.D.
http://www.ent-consult.com
francispoon - 03 Feb 2004 10:46 GMT
> To seek a tinnitus cure via changing blood pressure medications is extremely
> dangerous.
My personal physician told me that mine is NOT a tinnitus but a migraine.
FP
===================================================
> Tinnitus is a subjective symptom.
> Blood pressure is an objective measurement and if you can find a medication
[quoted text clipped - 8 lines]
> Murray Grossan, M.D.
> http://www.ent-consult.com
Howard Gutnick - 03 Feb 2004 19:00 GMT
> > To seek a tinnitus cure via changing blood pressure medications is extremely
> > dangerous.
>
> My personal physician told me that mine is NOT a tinnitus but a migraine.
>
> FP
If you hear sounds when no outside sounds are physically present, it is
tinnitus. That is the definition of tinnitus. You can have migraine that is
divorced from tinnitus, migraine that exacerbates tinnitus, or tinnitus by
its lonely self.
HNG
ENTconsult - 04 Feb 2004 04:10 GMT
If its Migraine there are a dozen excellent medications to treat this.
Murray Grossan, M.D.
http://www.ent-consult.com
francispoon - 04 Feb 2004 01:45 GMT
> To seek a tinnitus cure via changing blood pressure medications is extremely
> dangerous. Tinnitus is a subjective symptom.
> Blood pressure is an objective measurement and if you can find a medication
> that works, further experimentation on your own should not be attempted.
My T has improved 'substantially' ever since i went back to using
calcium channel blocker as opposed to the new
Dyazide(hydrochloridethiazide) introduced later on.
FP
================================
> You can read and study the literature, but only the doctor in the trenches,
> treating blood pressure has the experience to understand this.
>
> I just took a two hour course on BP - not my field. I can tell you that there
> is a helll of a lot out there that only experience can teach you.
YES, that is why none of my doctors before could help me out
> One of the things i learned is that treating blood pressure can be difficult
> and jumping around in medications can be dangerous.
> Murray Grossan, M.D.
> http://www.ent-consult.com