The Red Green Tinnitus reducer


Okay, no duct tape but still a little wacky. Since we just had an interesting thread, I thought I'd follow up with this one. I'm wondering if any of you have discovered the same thing or if it's just me. I've had tinnitus for the last ten years. I would not consider it a severe case, albeit significant. Not sure if this is always accompanied by hearing loss but in my case it is due to abuse. I've never made a connection between my tinnitus and itchiness and am still not sure there is one. I'm speaking strictly of the outer ear, nothing to do with my ear canal. I have a constant itch deep in the flesh of my ears, not just surface. The central location is about 2/3 up the outer rim and about 1/4"-1/2" in. Constantly relieving this itch has become almost second nature.
One day while listening to my system I accidentally stumbled on a strange and pleasant phenomenon. Reaching up to relieve my itch while turning to look out my front window and thus focusing the ear in question solely in the direction of the sound, I experienced a marked transitional increase in fidelity. This just blew me away. Not only that, but I also noticed an incidental decrease in my tinnitus simultaneously when experimenting. As I stated, this itch is deep in the flesh of my ears so simply scratching doesn't change anything. I sometimes, not always, pinch said area quite hard between thumb and forefinger with shifting motion. It was during one of those moments this happened. It seems to be pressure that causes it. I have verified it over and over and it is real. Just to clarify, I don't sit clinging to my ears in front of my system. For the most part I consider it a novelty. But it wouldn't take much to build a pair of cool punk clamps for your ears:)
So do any of you out there relate to this? Or willing to discover you do?
csontos

Showing 6 responses by sabai

Donjr,

... "the neurotoxicity thing"? It's a no-brainer. Pun intended.

The Mayo Clinic? Ya gotta be joking. Do you have a history of silver amalgam fillings?
Tinnitus is often associated with neurotoxicity. In many cases this is caused by so-called silver amalgam fillings that are 50% mercury.
Donjr,

If they are silver colored they are so-called silver amalgam fillings -- which are are actually 50% mercury. They should be called mercury fillings. That's The Big Dental Lie. Sitting 2 inches from the brain they are not only associated with tinnitus and migraine headaches, they are also associated with all the major childhood and adult neurological conditions. Unless they are removed by a mercury-free dentist using a special mercury filtration system you will be far more mercury toxic after removal than before due to inhaling deadly mercury vapor.
Donjr,

If you get the fillings replaced by a mercury-free dentist using a special mercury filtration system, and then detoxify the mercury that remains in the organs (including the brain), you can greatly reduce if not eliminate tinnitus that is caused by so-called silver amalgam fillings that are actually 50% mercury.
Psag,

Silver amalgam fillings are 50% mercury -- the most powerful neurotoxin on the planet. They are indeed directly associated with many cases of tinnitus -- although this may not be widely recognized.
Psag,

Mercury fillings do not "selectively affect the ears". I did not say that and I did not imply that. Mercury fillings are associated with a wide variety of neurological conditions including tinnitus -- and including many much more serious neurological conditions including Multiple Sclerosis, Parkinson's disease, Alzheimer's disease, autism and epilepsy -- to name a few.

By the way, Wikipedia is full of disinformation about neurological conditions -- and many other matters, as well.