Medical Treatment of Tinnitus
Re-Stimulate the Nerve From Ear-to-Brain
Patients who choose medical treatment for their tinnitus often live confident and independent lives, free from frustrating ringing, swooshing, or buzzing in their ears. Our most successful patients chose our advanced treatment process to restore the sound activity to the auditory system. In doing so, the sounds provided by our treatment process can work to retrain the auditory system to properly identify sounds and suppress the mistaken increase in neural activity necessary for effective tinnitus treatment.
When done properly, patients living with tinnitus have an 80%-90%+ chance of living with reduced, and often eliminated, tinnitus perception.
Direct Treatment of Tinnitus
The most effective, and direct, treatment of tinnitus is to provide proper stimulation to your auditory system, including your ear to brain nerve. Using modern treatment technology, our team will begin your prescription at around 80% of the sound stimuli your nerve requires.
Over the next three to four visits, roughly 30-45 days, we will gradually increase the amount of sound support to your auditory system until we’ve reached your full prescription. Your short-term tinnitus perception will improve. This approach directly addresses the treatment of tinnitus.
Throughout your ongoing tinnitus treatment, we will continue to fine-tune your prescription and make frequency modifications that allow you to put the frustration, irritation, and distraction of tinnitus behind you permanently.
Indirect Treatment of Tinnitus
An indirect, and less effective, approach to tinnitus is "distracting" your mind away from the constant ringing, whooshing, or buzzing by introducing an additional sound.
This is "indirect stimulation" of the auditory system. The most common noises used are white noise or music. This method may support the treatment of tinnitus to some extent.
Indirect approaches include sleeping with the television on, keeping a fan on, and other forms of noise generators. This includes non-FDA-approved tinnitus-maskers. These techniques distract your brain by asking it to focus on different sounds. One of the main issues with this approach is that patients often feel they are trading one bothersome sound for another.