Tinnitus Retraining Therapy - Learn How TRT Can End Tinnitus Forever
Tinnitus affects nearly 17% of the population in some form or another.
Yet until recently, very little was done to combat this dreadful condition.
There is new hope, Tinnitus Retraining Therapy (TRT), provides help for the Tinnitus sufferer.
Let's look at this fairly complex therapy in more detail.
First, a very basic definition of Tinnitus.
Tinnitus is a perception of noise in the ear when no external noise is present.
Tinnitus is considered a condition or natural phenomenon rather than a disease.
Symptoms vary widely from patient to patient.
Some report as being able to easily tolerate the condition and actually live a very normal life.
Others however find it very debilitating and seek relief in a variety of treatments.
Although some may find relief, many others continue to suffer in silence.
Since Tinnitus symptoms are perceptional in nature, very little in terms of research and advancement had been accomplished or even initiated over the years.
Therapy and treatment seem mediocre at best.
Physicians often times can not offer any effective treatments.
So the patient is left to live and cope with the condition the best they can.
Tinnitus Retraining Therapy offers a new hope in treatment.
Tinnitus Retraining Therapy was developed in the mid 1980's and was published only as recently as 1990 by Dr.
Jastreboff.
This research and protocol has shown significant success which continues to be very exciting news for the person afflicted with Tinnitus.
Tinnitus Retraining Therapy is very time intensive -- patients don't generally see improvement until 12 to 18 months into the treatment.
Tinnitus Retraining Therapy involves a combination of retraining and sound enrichment.
First and foremost, the patient goes through a period of learning to understand what causes Tinnitus.
Understanding the condition goes a long way to the reaction of certain noises.
Strong reactions are eventually reduced to mild or even no reaction at all, through something called habituation.
Rather than having negative and/or powerful emotions attached to noises, acceptance becomes the norm.
As an analogy, think of attending a basketball game at a crowded arena.
When you first arrive at the arena, the noise seems deafening and maybe even uncomfortable.
However the noise becomes less and less irritating as time passes (habituation of reaction).
There is a reduction of perception to the noise at the arena (habituation of perception).
Tinnitus continues to plague a large percentage of the population in some form.
Tinnitus Retraining Therapy offers new hope to a debilitating condition.
Even though this has been a very broad overview of a complicated therapy.
The hope is for somebody plagued with Tinnitus to read this article and act on learning further about this new and promising therapy.
Yet until recently, very little was done to combat this dreadful condition.
There is new hope, Tinnitus Retraining Therapy (TRT), provides help for the Tinnitus sufferer.
Let's look at this fairly complex therapy in more detail.
First, a very basic definition of Tinnitus.
Tinnitus is a perception of noise in the ear when no external noise is present.
Tinnitus is considered a condition or natural phenomenon rather than a disease.
Symptoms vary widely from patient to patient.
Some report as being able to easily tolerate the condition and actually live a very normal life.
Others however find it very debilitating and seek relief in a variety of treatments.
Although some may find relief, many others continue to suffer in silence.
Since Tinnitus symptoms are perceptional in nature, very little in terms of research and advancement had been accomplished or even initiated over the years.
Therapy and treatment seem mediocre at best.
Physicians often times can not offer any effective treatments.
So the patient is left to live and cope with the condition the best they can.
Tinnitus Retraining Therapy offers a new hope in treatment.
Tinnitus Retraining Therapy was developed in the mid 1980's and was published only as recently as 1990 by Dr.
Jastreboff.
This research and protocol has shown significant success which continues to be very exciting news for the person afflicted with Tinnitus.
Tinnitus Retraining Therapy is very time intensive -- patients don't generally see improvement until 12 to 18 months into the treatment.
Tinnitus Retraining Therapy involves a combination of retraining and sound enrichment.
First and foremost, the patient goes through a period of learning to understand what causes Tinnitus.
Understanding the condition goes a long way to the reaction of certain noises.
Strong reactions are eventually reduced to mild or even no reaction at all, through something called habituation.
Rather than having negative and/or powerful emotions attached to noises, acceptance becomes the norm.
As an analogy, think of attending a basketball game at a crowded arena.
When you first arrive at the arena, the noise seems deafening and maybe even uncomfortable.
However the noise becomes less and less irritating as time passes (habituation of reaction).
There is a reduction of perception to the noise at the arena (habituation of perception).
Tinnitus continues to plague a large percentage of the population in some form.
Tinnitus Retraining Therapy offers new hope to a debilitating condition.
Even though this has been a very broad overview of a complicated therapy.
The hope is for somebody plagued with Tinnitus to read this article and act on learning further about this new and promising therapy.