Expert Tinnitus Management with Eartone Hearing Aid Center
Tinnitus can disrupt your daily life, making it difficult to concentrate, relax, or even sleep. When persistent ringing, buzzing, or hissing sounds take over your quiet moments, it can affect your mood, energy, and overall well-being.
You deserve relief and the confidence that comes from the highest level of support. With the right management techniques and advanced hearing solutions from our expert team at Eartone Hearing Aid Center, you can minimize the impact of tinnitus and regain control over your hearing health.

What Is Tinnitus?
Tinnitus is the perception of sound in your ears or head when no external source is present. You might hear ringing, buzzing, hissing, or even whooshing noises that others cannot hear. These sounds can be constant or intermittent, soft or loud, and may vary throughout the day.
While tinnitus is not a disease and currently has no cure, you can manage its effects. With professional hearing care, you benefit from proven strategies and technologies designed to help you live more comfortably.
Understanding the type of tinnitus you experience can help you find the most effective ways to manage it. Your symptoms are unique to you, as nobody hears tinnitus in the same way, but tinnitus generally falls into a few main categories:
Subjective Tinnitus: This is the most common type, where only you can hear the sounds. You might notice ringing, buzzing, or fluttering in your ear that varies in pitch and intensity. Subjective tinnitus is often linked to hearing loss or exposure to loud noise, and it can be managed with expert hearing care and sound therapy.
Objective Tinnitus: This rare form of tinnitus can sometimes be heard by your hearing care professional during an examination. It is usually caused by physical issues within the ear or blood vessels. While less common, objective tinnitus may respond to specific medical treatments.
Tonal Tinnitus: You may experience a continuous or intermittent sound with a well-defined pitch, such as a ringing or whistling. Tonal tinnitus can be especially noticeable in quiet environments and may benefit from sound therapy or hearing aids.
Pulsatile Tinnitus: This type is characterized by rhythmic pulsing or whooshing sounds, often in time with your heartbeat. Pulsatile tinnitus can sometimes indicate underlying vascular issues, so it’s important to discuss these symptoms with a healthcare provider.
How Tinnitus Management Helps You
You do not have to face tinnitus alone. Expert management from our team can help you:
While our team does not diagnose tinnitus itself, we can help you manage your symptoms with expert hearing aid technology.
How Hearing Aids Can Help Manage Tinnitus
You may be surprised to learn that hearing aids do more than just improve your ability to hear conversations and sounds around you; they can also play a key role in managing tinnitus.
When you use hearing aids, you benefit from advanced features designed to reduce the prominence of tinnitus and make daily life more comfortable.
Hearing aids work by amplifying the sounds you want to hear, which can help mask or blend the internal sounds of tinnitus. Many modern devices include built-in sound therapy programs, such as gentle white noise or calming tones, that further distract your brain from focusing on tinnitus. This means you can enjoy clearer hearing and experience less disruption from ringing or buzzing.
With the right hearing aids, you can rest assured that your tinnitus management plan is tailored to your needs.
Rest assured that our hearing care professionals will recommend and program devices that support both your hearing and your comfort, so you can get back to enjoying the sounds that matter most to you.

Can hearing aids help with tinnitus even if I don’t have significant hearing loss?
Yes, you can benefit from hearing aids specifically designed for tinnitus management. These devices often include sound therapy features that mask or distract from tinnitus, providing relief even if your hearing loss is mild or minimal.
Will tinnitus get worse over time if left unmanaged?
Are there lifestyle changes that can help reduce tinnitus symptoms?
Is it possible to completely eliminate tinnitus sounds?
Why does my tinnitus pulse with my heartbeat?






