Kieran Lamb's Library tagged → View Popular
Tinnitus: The noise that annoys - The Independent 13th October 2009
"Ringing, buzzing and humming in the ears can be torture for tinnitus sufferers like me, writes Enjoli Liston. But at last there's hope of a cure"
How a jab in your ear could banish tinnitus for good? - Daily Mail 7th July 2009
An injection that's administered into the eardrum could help relieve tinnitus. The jab contains a drug that blocks the brain chemical glutamate, which is thought to play a key role in the development of tinnitus.
Magnets stop the nightmare of tinnitus, researchers say - Daily Mail 2nd January 2009
Brain stimulation is being used to ease symptoms of tinnitus.
A study has found that all patients given the treatment experienced some improvement; a year afterwards, some patients were still tinnitus-free in one or both ears.
Why you can call me Ringfellow, by nightclub owner Peter - Daily Mail 25th January 2009
At first I thought that my flight to New York had caused yet another bout of deafness. It was back in 1983 and my nightclub Stringfellows had just opened in London. I had come down with flu but insisted on going to America on a promotional jaunt.
When we touched down I noticed a sound in my left ear - a bit like when you put a seashell up to your ear and hear a loud rushing noise.
Letters: Gig-goers need to listen up about the risk of hearing loss - The Guardian 10th January 2009
Mark Barnes's article (Come on, feel the noise, 9 January, Film & Music) will strike a chord with anyone who has ever left a music gig with a ringing sensation in their ears or dull hearing. This is the first sign of hearing damage, though few of us recognise it as such. RNID's Don't Lose the Music campaign aims to change this. Four million young people in the UK are at risk of hearing damage from amplified music. Many don't know that the very thing they love could be harming them.
Dr Tom Smith on the best types of sleep, cures for tinnitus, and chronic constipation - The Guardian 1st November 2008
I am exhausted at the moment by a late-night schedule of work and study. I've heard that the hours of sleep before midnight are more regenerating than those after. If so, should I alter my sleeping hours to increase my brain power?
Selected Tags
Related Tags
Sponsored Links
Highlighter, Sticky notes, Tagging, Groups and Network: integrated suite dramatically boosting research productivity. Learn more »
Join Diigo
