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Medical Forum / Diseases and Disorders / Tinnitus / May 2004

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Why is my T so 'intermittent'?

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francispoon - 01 May 2004 16:08 GMT
After a series of treatment, my T has been transformed from a
maddening ill of about 6 months ago to be currently an intermittent
one.

This intermittent T is characterized by a good day followed by a bad
day which is again followed by another good day...and so forth.

A GOOD DAY: getting up in the morning with positional pressure felt on
the left side of my head; then this pressure shifts to the right side
of the head after taking blood pressure controlling medication; on the
right head side it becomes rather light and acceptable; the day is a
quiet day.

A BAD DAY: positional pressure stays on the left side where it
originates, and where it becomes _tangibly heavy_ and the day is a
noisy day.

Questions:
(1)What has brought about this phenomenon?
(2)What can be done to make everyday a good day?
I am still waiting to see my doctor about methazolamide as suggested
Murray.  Perhaps the answer lies right there for (2).

My ENT doctor is scratching his ball in figuring out the above too.
His line of thinking has been that since I don;t have meniere disease
or symptoms of vertigo and dizziness, I could not have suffered from a
fluid build-up in my inner ear.  Time after time he goes back to blood
circulation in the inner ear for answers.

Thank you in advance.

FP
Elly Byrne - 01 May 2004 21:16 GMT
One of these days you might take yourself off to Tinnitus Resources
and investigate the muscular connection.

You seem to have tried everything else except this.

http://eebee.net/TinnitusIsaPainintheNeck.shtml

>After a series of treatment, my T has been transformed from a
>maddening ill of about 6 months ago to be currently an intermittent
[quoted text clipped - 28 lines]
>
>FP

Tinnitus is a pain in the neck
Elly's Tinnitus Resources
http://eebee.net/
http://meniere.eebee.net/

For email: elly at eebee.cjb.net
francispoon - 02 May 2004 12:32 GMT
> One of these days you might take yourself off to Tinnitus Resources
> and investigate the muscular connection.

I think it has more to do with the nerve in my head than my muscular
conditions.  The doctor from the department of neurology seems to have
thought so.  It is amazing how little do most doctors know about T.

FP
===========================================

> You seem to have tried everything else except this.
>
[quoted text clipped - 39 lines]
>
> For email: elly at eebee.cjb.net
Elly Byrne - 02 May 2004 21:14 GMT
Until you open your mind to new ideas you will stay where you are,

"It you always do what you've always done
You will always get what you've always got."

http://eebee.net/TinnitusIsaPainintheNeck.shtml

>> One of these days you might take yourself off to Tinnitus Resources
>> and investigate the muscular connection.
[quoted text clipped - 49 lines]
>>
>> For email: elly at eebee.cjb.net

Tinnitus is a pain in the neck
Elly's Tinnitus Resources
http://eebee.net/
http://meniere.eebee.net/

For email: elly at eebee.cjb.net
R Benner - 02 May 2004 21:26 GMT
Beliefs are stronger than Facts.

or

Don't try to confuse me with the facts, I know what I know and that is the
end of the discussion.

> Until you open your mind to new ideas you will stay where you are,
>
[quoted text clipped - 63 lines]
>
> For email: elly at eebee.cjb.net
 
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