"What is the treatment of tinnitus?
After a careful evaluation, your doctor may find an identifiable cause and be able to treat or make recommendations to treat the tinnitus. Once you have had a thorough evaluation, an essential part of treatment is your own understanding of the tinnitus (what has caused it, and your options for treatment).
In many cases, there is no specific treatment for tinnitus. It may simply go away on its own, or it may be a permanent disability that the patient will have to "live with." Some otolaryngologists have recommended niacin to treat tinnitus. However, there is no scientific evidence to suggest that niacin helps reduce tinnitus, and it may cause problems with skin flushing."
Tinnitus Causes, Symptoms, Diagnosis, Treatment, and Prevention Information on MedicineNet.com
"What drugs are available for treating tinnitus?
Anti-Depressants, Tranquilizers,
and Muscle Relaxants
Anti-drepressants are drugs used to prevent or relieve mental depression. Tranquilizers are drugs that promote tranquility by calming, soothing, quieting, or pacifying without drpressant effects. Muscle relaxants are drugs that reduce tension in the muscle.
Many tinnitus sufferers become depressed from having to deal with the constant noise. Treating the depression may make the tinnitus seem less severe. But beware that certain ototoxic anti-depressants may worsen tinnitus. SSRI anti-depressants may temporarily worsen tinnitus for the first few weeks, but risk fewer side-effects as compared to the older tricyclic drugs.
Tricyclic anti-depressants, such as Nortriptyline and benzodiazepines, such as Alprazolam (Xanax) were used in one study in which some people reported improvement.
Possible reasons:
* Patients just think they feel better (placebo effect).
* Since these drugs are central nervous system depressants, auditory responsiveness diminishes.
* Tinnitus is stress-related - i.e. muscle tension in neck & jaw restricts blood and lymph flow. "
Tinnitus FAQ - Treatment Possibilities
Here's my google search results and if you look the repeating theme is that different treatments have mixed results. One of the important things to do is determine what has caused the tinnitus which can be anything from environmental to illness to genetics. If your doctor is a general practitioner or a family doctor you should get a referral for a specialist and before you go sit down with some paper and pen and go back through the months or years prior to the arrival of your tinnitus and writing down events and situations that could have lead to its appearance.
treating tinnitus - Google Search