According
to Ayurveda, tinnitus in not a disease but a symptom of prana vayu
disturbance. Prana vayu is a subdosha of vata
which resides in the head and governs all higher cerebral functions, including
swallowing and the inspiratory phase of respiration. If tinnitus goes
untreated, other symptoms of prana vayu disturbance may follow,
including anxiety, fear, nervousness, sleep disorder, tics, tremors, and
stuttering. There may be other symptoms of vata disturbance in
the ear, specifically dried ear wax, pain, and deafness.
Treatment
Nasya
Vacha (Acorus calamus) oil nasya, has a powerful effect
in calming and balancing the prana vayu. To obtain the maximum
effect at the head (the seat of prana vayu), and to circumvent
any side effects of hyperacidity or nausea which occasionally occur when
vacha is ingested, vacha is used in this case as a nasal
medication. A preparation of sesame oil medicated with calamus root is
taken nasally, five drops per nostril, at night and in the morning. The
nasya should be warmed to blood heat before administration.
Massage
Foot massage, wherein the soles of the feet are massaged with warm sesame
oil, has a specific effect in calming the prana vayu. At bedtime,
warm sesame oil should be applied to the soles of the feet and also to
the scalp. This treatment rapidly normalizes the prana vayu.
Eardrops
To calm the vata in the ears, ten drops of warm sesame oil is
applied daily to each ear. The oil is allowed to remain in the first ear
for five or ten minutes, then that ear is cleaned, and the same procedure
is followed with the other ear, with the patient lying on the other side.
Typically, this treatment should alleviate tinnitus, and most other symptoms
of prana vayu disturbance, within eight to ten days.
Botanicals
Oral administration of sarasvati churna can be given in doses
of a quarter teaspoon twice daily after meals. Since it contains vacha,
sarasvati churna should not be used in pregnancy, bleeding disorder
or peptic ulcer.
Lifestyle Changes
Consumption of caffeine, nicotine, or cocaine can disturb the prana
vayu leading to tinnitus, as can excess television watching, excess
use of computers, or sleeping near an electrical outlet. Lifestyle adjustments
are thus an essential part of the effective treatment of tinnitus.
Tinnitus and
Kundalini
Tinnitus, a warning symptom of disturbed prana vayu, should be
carefully distinguished from perceptible nad, an indicator of
active kundalini. The nad, or cosmic sound current,
can be perceived only when our normally dormant potential energy, known
in Ayurveda as kundalini shakti, the 'serpent power', is awakened.
Practitioners who are unaware of or unfamiliar with this phenomenon may
present to their physician complaining of tinnitus, when in fact they
have begun to experience the nad. The following qualities distinguish
perceptible nad from tinnitus:
1. Nad is heard only in the right ear.
2. The sound typically resembles the buzzing of a bee, the ringing of
Tibetan bells, singing bowls, or other musical instrument.
3. The sound usually heralds or accompanies an altered state of consciousness.
The treatments for
tinnitus will neither help nor harm a person experiencing perceptible
nad In fact, oiling the soles of the feet and the scalp, the ears, and
the nose, are beneficial preventative measures for anyone. However, it
will be extremely helpful for the person experiencing this phenomenon
to understand that, far from being a warning symptom of some imbalance,
ringing ears due to nad are a positive sign of spiritual progress.
In summary, tinnitus
is a symptom of prana vayu imbalance. If it goes untreated, more
serious symptoms may result. Warm oil and vata-soothing herbs
are most valuable in the treatment, and may be administered locally in
the ears, nasally, and orally. Tinnitus should be carefully distinguished
from kundalini phenomenon.
Published in the
Protocol Journal of Botanical Medicine, Vol.2, No.1, pp 172-173
Alakananda Devi
(Alakananda Ma) is
director of Alandi Ayurvedic Clinic in Boulder, Colorado, and principal
teacher of Alandi School of Ayurveda, a traditional ayurvedic school and
apprenticeship program. She can be reached at 303-786-7437 or by email
at:
info@alandiashram.org.
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