The intense pain at the vertex, which of itself is sometimes quite sufficient to produce delirium, the tinnitus aurium, &c.
Tinnitus aurium and vertigo are sometimes present, and may be troublesome if the wax rests upon the tympanic membrane.
Deafness and tinnitus are dependent upon the accumulation of epithelium and débris.
Tinnitus aurium, or subjective noises in the ear, may constitute a very annoying and persistent symptom.
Kauffmann reports a case of what he calls objective tinnitus aurium, in which the noise originating in the patient's ears was distinctly audible by others.
Kauffmann expresses the opinion that the noises were due to clonic spasm of the tensor velum palati, and states that under appropriate treatment the tinnitus gradually subsided.
Plica began after an attack of acute fever, with pains like those of acute rheumatism in the head and extremities, and possibly vertigo, tinnitus aurium, ophthalmia, or coryza.
The varieties of the disturbances of the functions of the ear range from tinnitus aurium to congestion causing complete deafness.
Both Caton and Carter have found that the addition of bromohydric acid to the sodium salicylate mitigated or controlled the tinnitus and deafness produced by full doses of that salt.
There is very often intolerance of light, tinnitus aurium, and loss or perversion of the senses of taste and smell.
Many were troubled with a tinnitus aurium, or singing in the ears; and numbers suffered from violent earaches or pains in the meatus auditorius, which in some turned to an abscess.
Thus in some cases three grains of sulphate of quinia were given every two or three hours until tinnitus was produced, and then this was maintained during the remainder of the pyrexia and of the intermission.
Tinnitus Aurium; or, Singing in the Ears: remarks on its Causes and Treatment.
To relieve tinnitus or vertigo which appears to be due to an alteration of tension within the tympanic cavity, the result of an impermeable stricture of the Eustachian tube.
This will cause immediate relief of the intense pain and tinnitus which may have been set up by its movements against the sensitive tympanic membrane.
If the tinnitus be unbearable and all other measures have failed to cure it, the question of extirpation of the cochlea, in order to destroy the nerve-terminals, may be discussed.
If tinnitus and attacks of vertigo, due to marked retraction of the membrane, are temporarily relieved by inflation.
The difficulty of this latter operation and the very slight chance of cure which it offers, owing to the tinnitus probably being central, are sufficient to raise the question as to whether such an operation is really justifiable.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "tinnitus" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.