Poll: Do You Have Any Missing Molars on the Side Where You Have the Loudest Tinnitus?

Poll: Do you have any missing molars on the side where you have the loudest tinnitus?


  • Total voters
    42
The poll is a bit confusing, but anyway... Two missing lower molars and roughly even tinnitus in both ears. I cannot answer in the poll that the missing molars are in my lower jaw, because I have to select the "even in both ears" option.

What are you trying to investigate? :)
 
The poll is a bit confusing, but anyway... Two missing lower molars and roughly even tinnitus in both ears. I cannot answer in the poll that the missing molars are in my lower jaw, because I have to select the "even in both ears" option.

What are you trying to investigate? :)
Just select "yes but my tinnitus is in both ears" :)

I am trying to see if missing teeth could have an effect on tinnitus because of bruxism during the night.
 
http://www.w1dental.com/articles/358-2/

The section on electrical activity is interesting.

There's several posts along with several other articles/posts where tinnitus could be caused from the metal of dental implants. Metal in mouth even from liners of crown can cause the brain to react causing tinnitus. More than one metal in mouth can cause ringing. Many when having metal removed saw their tinnitus disappear.
 
I was just sent this link by someone. I'll let the person remain anonymous unless he wants to come forth. :) This talks about tinnitus and teeth:

http://www.w1dental.com/articles/358-2/
He? That narrows it down ;)

I did get one week of loud tinnitus after bone anchors were placed. After that, my ears seemed to have gotten a lot more sensitive. Removing the bone anchors did not change anything. While having tinnitus I got two implants with crowns to replace the missing teeth. This did not have an effect on my tinnitus.

This one operation included placing the bone anchors, removing two primary teeth which had grown attached to the jaw bone and `weakening' of the lower jaw to make more movement possible for the braces. I suspect that it was the long and loud drilling which caused the tinnitus, and not the placement of metal.
 
@JasonP I sent the link to your inbox. My ID should had been attached with the message. I sent it to you because of our recent conversations. The link is also not direct to your polling questions.

On this forum and others, their's quite a few people who believe that metal implants or other metal in their mouths caused their somatic T. There about six other articles about this. Some posters say that metal in mouth has caused them all sorts of health problems including jaw, neck, back, throat and head pain.
 
I have nerve damage on the right side of my mouth, the same side where my T is loudest. My lingual nerve was damaged 7 years ago during the extraction of wisdom teeth. It never completely healed; I still feel continuous tingling on the right side of my tongue. It drove me crazy the first few months but now I hardly ever notice it anymore. So I guess I went through a similar habituation process as now with my T :)

Anyway, I have wondered whether the nerve damage could be somehow related to my T, but there are two arguments against that: 1) I have one-sided hearing loss, which is a much more likely explanation for my T (although the origin of the hearing loss itself remains unclear); and 2) my T only emerged 7 years after the nerve damage. Still, there could be some relation I suppose...
 
I have nerve damage on the right side of my mouth, the same side where my T is loudest. My lingual nerve was damaged 7 years ago during the extraction of wisdom teeth. It never completely healed; ... Anyway, I have wondered whether the nerve damage could be somehow related to my T, but there are two arguments against that: 1) I have one-sided hearing loss, which is a much more likely explanation for my T (although the origin of the hearing loss itself remains unclear); and 2) my T only emerged 7 years after the nerve damage. Still, there could be some relation I suppose...

I have had root canals and crowns on both sides of my mouth, having had problems since I was a child despite good care. Just the luck of the draw.

There are close connections between the chewing muscles, the ligaments of the jaw, and the nerve supply of the temporomandibular joint with the parts of the brain that process and interpret sound. What you're describing isn't TMJ, of course, but the nerves in the jaw are complicated. It's a wonder that dentists even do root canals, when you consider how easy it is to damage those nerves.

9b_Inferior20Alveolar20and20Long20Buccal.gif
 
I only have 17 teeth in total due to genetics (two of them milk teeth). I also have amalgam fillings in 3 of my 4 molars.
 
My wisdom teeth were pulled many years ago, but I only had three, the one at the bottom left was not created.
My tinnitus is on the left.
 
I have nerve damage on the right side of my mouth, the same side where my T is loudest. My lingual nerve was damaged 7 years ago during the extraction of wisdom teeth. It never completely healed; I still feel continuous tingling on the right side of my tongue. It drove me crazy the first few months but now I hardly ever notice it anymore. So I guess I went through a similar habituation process as now with my T :)

Anyway, I have wondered whether the nerve damage could be somehow related to my T, but there are two arguments against that: 1) I have one-sided hearing loss, which is a much more likely explanation for my T (although the origin of the hearing loss itself remains unclear); and 2) my T only emerged 7 years after the nerve damage. Still, there could be some relation I suppose...

I had my wisdom teeth surgically removed before they surfaced because it was the only way my parents could get it covered for insurance.
I suspect it is to blame for my atypical facial pain that I have been suffering from for 2 years.
 
My wisdom teeth were pulled many years ago, but I only had three, the one at the bottom left was not created.
My tinnitus is on the left.

@Tinniger I didn't know that you only had hearing loss only in one ear. I would research this - wisdom teeth removal - cell, pulp and nerve (fiber) structure with oral nerve damage for delay of hearing loss in one ear. Research hearing loss where somatic volume doesn't differ in one ear. Research non sudden hearing loss or ear structure damage as non pathological, where stress is listed as a co-factor. From my research Lyme and related diseases are other somatic reasons. There is treatment for both, even after years. If the neck has involvement then T would move back and forth from the other ear and the volume/pitch would be high with hyperacusis.
 
It's a wonder that dentists even do root canals, when you consider how easy it is to damage those nerves.

Yes that is what happened to me in 2002. Back lower molar root canal from hell leaving me with nerve damage and jaw bone damage and instant severe tinnitus.
 

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