Most people with tinnitus try several treatments that don't work — not because the ringing can't improve, but because they never address the real cause.
Answer 3 questions to find out which pattern your symptoms match.
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👥Over 50 million Americans experience tinnitus — and most have tried treatments that only mask the symptom without addressing the cause.
Question 1 of 30%
DurationImpactTreatments
Question 1 of 3
The longer tinnitus persists, the more likely it involves the auditory nerve — not just the ear itself.
How long have you been hearing the ringing or buzzing?
Question 2 of 3
Tinnitus that affects sleep and concentration is often linked to the brain's stress-anxiety loop amplifying the signal.
Outside of the ringing itself — what has it taken from you?
Question 3 of 3
What you've already tried tells us a lot about what type of tinnitus pattern is at work.
Which of these have you tried for the ringing?
Analyzing your pattern...
Matching your answers to known tinnitus patterns
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Evaluating symptom duration
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Assessing auditory nerve involvement
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Reviewing treatment history
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Generating your assessment
✓ Assessment Complete
Your Symptoms Match the Auditory Nerve Loop Pattern
Based on your answers, your tinnitus appears consistent with chronic auditory nerve inflammation — where the brain generates the ringing signal because damaged nerves can't send a clean signal back.
What this pattern means — and why most treatments miss it
🧠Research from Georgetown University shows tinnitus isn't just an ear problem — it's the brain attempting to compensate for damaged auditory nerve cells by generating its own signal. That signal is the ringing you hear.
🔄When stress or anxiety increases, the brain amplifies that signal further — which is why the ringing always seems louder when you're tired, stressed, or trying to sleep in a quiet room.
🩸The inner ear's cochlea depends on steady blood flow and low oxidative stress to function. Years of reduced circulation and inflammation gradually damage the hair cells that send clean signals to the brain.
Why common treatments don't reach the root cause
✗White noise & masking apps — cover the sound while you're using them. The ringing returns the moment you turn them off. The nerve damage continues.
✗Hearing aids — amplify sound but don't address the nerve inflammation or circulation issues driving the signal.
✗Standard supplements — most target hearing loss broadly, not the specific combination of auditory nerve support, circulation, and inflammation response that chronic tinnitus requires.
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