An Overview of Drugs that Help Tinnitus
The matter is that different people tolerate the condition differently. Fortunately, a large number of sufferers require little medical attention. This is because they find their tinnitus less bothersome than others do. These people get by with an ear masking device or not at all. They sleep at night better even without use of special devices like white noise generating maskers. They don’t take anxiety pills. Nor do they take sleeping pills. Most cases of tinnitus are mild to moderate requiring no serious treatment options. Or is it the tinnitus itself or the person’s reaction to tinnitus that’s taking on more force?
Scientists are still studying drugs that help tinnitus. Have they found one? Not only one but they have found many medications that bring down the ear ringing problems to a more comfortable level – not necessarily quieting it. Most experts agree that since tinnitus itself is never a threatening condition, the more important thing to be guarded is the psychological reaction of the sufferer to tinnitus.
Why are patients given antidepressants, for instance? The answer lies in the fact that the annoyance brought by tinnitus noise changes the way people live, or should we say people allow it to change the way they live. While lots can cope with having strange noise inside their heads, a few cannot. They must rely on external intervention to alleviate other associating conditions. Thus, while one can go out as if they are fine, one may need antidepressants and anti-anxiety pills to get on with their lives normally. Be reminded that these substances do not at all cure tinnitus but make it more manageable.
Sinus infections, ear disorders, and cardiovascular problems that bring about ringing in ears are treatable and, once treated, the tinnitus that accompanies them, non pulsatile or pulsatile tinnitus, goes away. Infections may be treated with antibiotics, provided they are caused by bacteria. Antihistamines may cure allergy, which could have induced tinnitus. A medication administered intravenously is said to provide relief from tinnitus. It’s called Lidocaine.
Nevertheless, most drugs produced by scientific medicine are still under laboratory research. None of which has proven considerable results. On the other had, the field of alternative medicine offers some of the most remarkable anecdotal evidence of homeopathic and herbal preparations working to stop tinnitus and its effects altogether. Asking your doctor about drugs that help tinnitus is more than a clever thing. Do not go trying something by yourself. You could do more harm than good.
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