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How does Sound Therapy help ear disorders?

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Sound Therapy helps in three ways.

1. Exercising the muscles.

          The middle ear contains two tiny muscles, the tensor tympani and the the stapedius. Good muscle tone and flexibility is essential for the fine tuning of the middle ear mechanism. The alternating high and low frequencies cause the ear muscles to repeatedly tense and relax. This exercise restores muscle tone and improves the functioning of the whole ear mechanism, improves hearing, alleviate tinnitus and vertigo.

2. Stimulating the cilia.

          These high frequency sounds stimulate the cilia (the fine, hair like sensory cells in the inner ear). Where the cilia have been flattened by too much noise, the high frequency sound stimulates them to return to their upright position. This restores the person's hearing in the high frequencies, improve the tinnitus problem, vertigo and and Meniere’s syndrome.

3. Psychological opening.

          Hearing is sometimes closed down to some extent for psychological reasons. Sound Therapy encourages resolution of psychological issues by reintroducing high frequency sound and re-creating the pre-birth experience of sound. As the psychological issues are resolved, the person can allow themselves to open to the full range of hearing.

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