Tinnitus

When your hearing tests look “normal” but the ringing keeps reacting to stress, sleep loss, jaw tension, or neck position, the missing piece is often the somatic load on your nervous system.

The Clinical Reality

Tinnitus is a symptom with multiple possible sources. In a subset of cases, the intensity and reactivity of ringing is influenced by somatic factors, meaning inputs from the neck, jaw, upper back, and cranial nerves can modulate what you perceive. When cervical and jaw muscles stay guarded, or when nerve tissues are sensitized from sustained load and stress, the auditory system can become more reactive. The goal in this clinic is not to “treat the ear,” but to identify and reduce modifiable musculoskeletal and neurologic contributors that can amplify tinnitus, especially when symptoms change with posture, clenching, head movement, or stress load.

Why Standard Care Fails

Standard care is essential for ruling out hearing loss, ear disease, medication effects, and other medical causes. The gap is that many workups end with reassurance and sound therapy without addressing the functional inputs that can drive reactivity. Imaging and exams often do not measure cervical muscle hypertonicity, temporomandibular load, trigger point referral, or nerve mechanosensitivity. Medications may blunt perception for some people but do not reliably change the mechanical and neural drivers that keep the system “turned up.” A functional approach focuses on tissue tone, movement strategy, and nervous system modulation, while staying aligned with ENT and audiology guidance.

Signs & Symptoms

Do any of these sound familiar?

Ringing that changes with jaw or neck movement

Volume or pitch shifts when you clench, chew, yawn, turn your head, look down at a laptop, or press on the jaw or side of the neck.

Tinnitus spikes with stress load and sleep disruption

Flares after late nights, travel, intense work periods, or poor recovery, often alongside neck tightness and shallow breathing patterns.

One-sided or asymmetric reactivity

More noticeable in one ear, often paired with same-side jaw tension, upper cervical stiffness, or shoulder girdle guarding.

Jaw fatigue, clenching, or facial tension

Morning jaw soreness, headaches at the temples, tooth sensitivity, or a sense that your bite feels “off” during flares.

Neck and upper back tightness with headache pressure

Occipital tightness, suboccipital pressure, or tension-type headaches that correlate with tinnitus intensity and screen time.

Root Cause Contributors

The mechanical drivers behind your symptoms

Cervical myofascial hypertonicity and trigger point referral

Sustained guarding in upper cervical and shoulder girdle musculature can increase sensory noise and amplify reactivity, especially with sustained posture and stress.

Temporomandibular load and masticatory muscle overactivity

Clenching and chewing muscles staying “on” can modulate tinnitus in somatic cases and often tracks with morning symptoms or workload.

Cranial and cervical nerve mechanosensitivity

Irritable nerve tissues can increase sensitivity to normal inputs, making symptoms fluctuate with movement, pressure, and fatigue.

Autonomic upshift and central sensitization patterns

High baseline arousal from chronic stress and poor recovery can keep the auditory system more vigilant, increasing the perceived intensity and intrusiveness of tinnitus.

What to Expect

Your roadmap to recovery
Weeks 1 to 2
You should have clearer pattern recognition: what reliably spikes tinnitus and what reliably settles it. Many patients notice early changes in neck and jaw tension and less “wired” reactivity, even if ringing is still present.
Weeks 3 to 6
Meaningful reduction in flare frequency or intensity is a common goal in somatic-responsive cases, along with improved sleep tolerance, fewer tension headaches, and better control of jaw clenching.
Weeks 7 to 12
Focus shifts to capacity: more stable symptoms under deadlines, travel, training, and long desk days. The target is improved predictability and faster recovery after triggers, with a maintenance plan as needed.

Frequently Asked Questions

Get answers to common questions

Tinnitus has multiple causes, and not all cases are responsive to musculoskeletal treatment. When tinnitus is somatically influenced, meaning it changes with jaw or neck position, clenching, or tissue pressure, reducing cervical and TMJ drivers can improve symptom intensity, intrusiveness, and reactivity for some patients. The aim is meaningful reduction and better control, not meaningful improvements.

If tinnitus is new, sudden, one-sided, associated with hearing loss, dizziness/vertigo, ear pain or drainage, neurologic symptoms, or you have major noise exposure history, an ENT or audiology evaluation is appropriate. If you have already been evaluated and still have reactive symptoms linked to jaw/neck tension, a functional assessment can be a useful next step.

We look for modulation. If pitch or loudness changes with head/neck movement, jaw motion, clenching, posture, or palpation of specific muscles, that suggests somatic contribution. We also assess for TMJ load, cervical mobility limits, trigger points, and nerve sensitivity patterns that correlate with your symptom spikes.

Most plans start with 1 to 2 visits per week for a short block to change the tissue and nervous system pattern, then taper based on stability. Frequency depends on chronicity, how reactive your tinnitus is, and how much neck and jaw load you carry day to day.

Normal hearing tests are common in tinnitus. It does not mean symptoms are “in your head.” It often means medical causes like significant hearing loss have not been identified, and functional drivers such as jaw and neck tension, stress physiology, and sensitization may be more relevant to address.

Yes. Sudden hearing loss, pulsatile tinnitus, significant vertigo, acute neurologic symptoms, active ear infection symptoms, or other concerning features warrant medical evaluation. This clinic focuses on musculoskeletal and neurologic contributors and coordinates with appropriate medical care when needed.

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