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Mind Body Life

What Is Tinnitus? Your Complete Guide to Ringing in the Ears

By Mind Body Life · March 19, 2026 · 9 min read · Tinnitus

Tinnitus is the perception of sound in one or both ears — or in the head — when no external sound source is present. It's remarkably common: approximately 15–20% of adults experience some form of tinnitus, and for about 20 million of them, it's chronic and burdensome. For 2 million, it's severe enough to be debilitating.

Despite its prevalence, tinnitus is poorly understood by the general public — and far too many people suffer in silence, believing nothing can be done. This guide covers what tinnitus is, what causes it, when to seek help, and what management options exist.

What Tinnitus Actually Is

Tinnitus is not a disease — it's a symptom of something else going on in the auditory system. It's generated somewhere between the cochlea (inner ear) and the auditory cortex (brain), and the exact mechanism varies depending on the underlying cause.

The most widely accepted model is that tinnitus results from maladaptive neuroplastic changes in the auditory pathway. When the cochlear hair cells are damaged (from noise exposure, aging, or ototoxicity), they send a reduced signal to the brain. The brain, interpreting this reduced input as silence, compensates by increasing its "gain" — the internal volume of the auditory system. This increased gain amplifies spontaneous neural activity, which the brain then interprets as sound: that's tinnitus.

In short: tinnitus is the brain's reaction to hearing system damage.

Types of Tinnitus

Subjective Tinnitus

The most common form — heard only by the person experiencing it. Typically described as ringing, buzzing, hissing, or roaring. It can be intermittent or constant, and varies in pitch from a low hum to a high-pitched whine. Subjective tinnitus is generated in the auditory pathway itself and is usually (though not always) associated with some degree of hearing loss.

Objective Tinnitus

Extremely rare — audible to a clinician using a stethoscope placed near the ear. Objective tinnitus typically has an identifiable physical source: blood vessel abnormalities (pulsatile tinnitus), middle ear muscle spasms, or Temporomandibular Joint (TMJ) dysfunction. Because objective tinnitus has a findable source, it's more likely to be treatable medically.

Pulsatile Tinnitus

A subtype where the tinnitus sounds synchronous with the heartbeat — a rhythmic whooshing or thumping. This suggests a vascular cause and warrants prompt investigation. Pulsatile tinnitus in one ear especially should be assessed promptly to rule out a vascular tumour or fistula.

Who Gets Tinnitus?

Tinnitus becomes more common with age — the same cochlear hair cell degradation that causes presbycusis (age-related hearing loss) also causes or accompanies tinnitus. However, it can affect anyone at any age, including children.

Key risk factors:

Common Causes and Triggers

Tinnitus is a symptom with many potential underlying causes. Identifying the cause is key to management:

Tinnitus and Hearing Loss

Most people with tinnitus also have some degree of hearing loss — often a mild, high-frequency loss they may not be consciously aware of. Treating the hearing loss with hearing aids (which amplify environmental sound and compensate for the reduced auditory signal) often reduces tinnitus as a secondary benefit. → See tinnitus management options

How Tinnitus Is Diagnosed

There is no single "tinnitus test." Diagnosis involves:

When to Seek Urgent Care

See a Doctor Promptly If:

  • Tinnitus is present in only one ear (unilateral) — especially if persistent
  • Tinnitus is pulsatile (rhythmic, in sync with your heartbeat)
  • Tinnitus is accompanied by vertigo, dizziness, or imbalance
  • Tinnitus developed after head trauma
  • Tinnitus is causing significant anxiety, depression, or sleep disruption
  • You experience sudden hearing loss alongside tinnitus — this is a medical emergency

Management Options

There is currently no cure for tinnitus — no pill, procedure, or device that can reliably eliminate it in all cases. However, tinnitus is highly manageable, and most people find that with the right approach, it stops significantly interfering with their quality of life.

Management strategies include:

→ Full tinnitus management guide

⚠️ Medical Disclaimer

This article is for informational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional medical advice. If you experience sudden hearing loss, severe tinnitus, or distress related to tinnitus, consult a healthcare provider. Read full disclaimer