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			 Tinnitus can happen sporadically, or in some cases may plague a 
			person daily. The cause is unclear, and so is the reason why 
			caffeine would lower one’s risk of developing the condition, 
			researchers say. 
 But tinnitus treatment guidelines sometimes advise cutting out 
			caffeine, which may have no basis.
 
 “In the ear, nose and throat literature and textbooks they often 
			tell people with tinnitus to avoid caffeine because it can make 
			tinnitus worse, but there really wasn’t great data to even support 
			that,” said the senior author of the new study, Dr. Gary Curhan, of 
			the Channing Division of Network Medicine at Brigham and Women's 
			Hospital in Boston.
 
 Tinnitus affects approximately 50 million Americans, but little is 
			known about risk factors other than exposure to loud noises and that 
			it can be a side effect of certain medications, including aspirin.
 
 Caffeine has long been thought to contribute to the development of 
			tinnitus, but research has been lacking, Curhan and his coauthors 
			write in The American Journal of Medicine.
 
 
			 
			To assess the relationship, the researchers analyzed data on more 
			than 65,000 women participants in the Nurses’ Health Study II. The 
			women were in their 20s through 40s in 1991 and none had tinnitus at 
			that point. They filled out dietary questionnaires every four years 
			during the study.
 
 In 2009, the participants were asked if they had ringing, roaring or 
			buzzing in their ears during the previous year. The researchers 
			found that 5,289 women reported having those symptoms "a few days a 
			week" or "daily."
 
 On average, the women consumed about 242 milligrams of caffeine per 
			day, which is equal to about three 8-ounce cups of coffee.
 
 “In our study, individuals who had higher caffeine intake, usually 
			in the form of coffee, had a lower risk of subsequently developing 
			tinnitus than those with the lowest intake of caffeine,” Curhan 
			said.
 
 The incidence of tinnitus was 15 percent lower among women who 
			consumed 450 to 599 mg/day of caffeine, equivalent to 6-8 cups of 
			coffee, when compared to the women who consumed less than 150 
			milligrams per day, equivalent to about a half a cup.
 
			
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			Because coffee was the most common source of caffeine, the 
			researchers also looked at decaffeinated coffee, but didn’t find the 
			same apparent benefit, which suggests the association is only with 
			caffeine, not some other substance in coffee.
 The study cannot prove that caffeine protected some women from 
			developing tinnitus, the authors caution, and it doesn’t suggest 
			that people with tinnitus should boost their caffeine consumption to 
			try to treat the condition.
 
 “It was an interesting article. I think it certainly gives us pause 
			to kind of look at things further,” Jennifer Ploch told Reuters 
			Health.
 
 A senior clinical audiologist with the University of Wisconsin 
			Hospital and Clinics in Madison, Ploch noted that the study doesn’t 
			try to answer the question of whether increasing caffeine intake 
			makes any difference in people who already have tinnitus.
 
 “That is the $10 million question -- could this be something that we 
			look into to that would really help us with our tinnitus patients?” 
			said Ploch, who wasn’t involved in the new study.
 
 As far as prevention of tinnitus, she said there aren’t many 
			recommendations.
 
 “Our general guidelines are if you have significant noise exposure, 
			wearing ear protection and being diligent about your ear protection, 
			is one good preventive measure,” she said. “Aside from protecting 
			your hearing as much as you can, there's not one good preventive 
			measure to avoid it.”
 
 SOURCE: http://bit.ly/X8xzmE The American Journal of Medicine, 
			August 2014.
 
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