Welcome to hk global tinniTus research founDATION

   UNDERSTANDING TINNITUS                  WHAT CAUSES TINNITUS?                   TINNITUS RESEARCH

                                                                     WHERE DOES TINNITUS COME FROM?         

 
 

Unfortunately ONLY those who have TINNITUS have an understanding of it i.e. YES IT DOES EXIST!   Those who have experienced temporary ringing in the ears, discount it when it disappears. When it becomes permanent you start asking questions, yet nobody seems to have the answer. Over the past ten years General Practitioners, Ear Specialists, Audiologists alike (and they are partially right) gravitate their thinking towards some sort of damage to the cochlear or cilia (tiny hairs). "YOU HAVE A HEARING PROBLEM". That is like telling a patient with a stomach ache that "YOU MIGHT HAVE A STOMACH PROBLEM". If you then ask, "What causes the ringing sounds?" they will repeat the above and then tell you it's a perceived sound, that it doesn't really exist! They don't know, how can they? They don't hear it, it doesn't exist, they have no understanding of it, so how can they help? Recently however, some Audiologists have come to realize tinnitus is real and have begun therapies to mask  the tinnitus using white noise and even assisting their patients  through councilling in methods of how to move the tinnitus into the background, reducing the stress tinnitus causes. Although this is absolutely necessary it does not address the tinnitus itself.     

The Mayo Clinic states "If the hairs inside your inner ear are bent or broken they can 'leak' random electrical impulses to your brain, causing tinnitus." I have to give them credit. They are actually looking at the mechanism creating tinnitus, which is more than most researchers do. The cilia (tiny hairs) and electrical impulses.   
But "leaking"? How do we plung the leak?  


                                                                   Auto Neurosensory Function (ANF)   


The answer lays in the abyss between Audiology (the mechanics of the auditory system) and Neuroscience (neurotransmitters and the nervous system) one of the basic functions of the human body.
One of the  basic functions of the human body is to make adjustments, both physically and mentally . . .  adapting to any given situation, voluntary and involuntary . . . . . to evolve.
We sustain a physical injury that can affect our mobility. Our body adjusts our posture or we may favour one leg because the other is injured. We do this so that we can maintain mobility. If the injury is temporary and the healing process is successful, we readjust. If there is anything in this universe that is constant, this adjustment or the drive to adjust would be it. 

However there is a function that remains static. Auto Neurosensory Function (ANF).
The senses, take touch for instance. You can feel your skin, the tips of your fingers without even touching anything. That's because the neurotransmitters are sending electrical  impulses to the nerve endings in your hands. You register these sensations because you are experiencing an electrical handshake (no pun intended).
What happens if there's a break in the cycle? With touch, when there are some nerve endings damaged, a tingling or heat is felt. The neurotransmissions increase to complete the cycle. This is due to the lack of response of some of the nerve endings.
The same occurs with the auditory system except sound is the response. As the cilia vibrate they send an electrical impulse to the cochlear nerve which is registered by the brain and then back again. This occurs constantly. If the cilia are damaged, temporarily flattened or restricted by perhaps some abnormality in the viscosity of the cochlear fliuds, neurotransmissions increase creating sound, frequencies directly related to the damaged cilia.  It's not uncommom for tinnitus sufferers to experience different types of sound frequencies from one another. There is a solution being researched to alleviate tinnitus. For more information regarding this and  Auto Neurosensory Function (ANF)  See NEUROSCIENCE and RESEARCH PAPER.