What’s going on in my head?

Tinnitus in the head, that is, tinnitus, is often caused by poor blood supply to the brain, neurological dysfunction or complications of ear diseases, etc. There are two kinds of physiological factors and pathological factors, and the more common causes are as follows: 1. Physiological tinnitus: when patients are overworked, nervous and anxious, sleep deprived or in a noisy environment, tinnitus may occur, resulting in the symptoms of tinnitus in the head; 2, Mental illness: Patients with a history of mental illness, such as anxiety or depression, may experience neurological dysfunction, which may lead to tinnitus, i.e., a zipping sound in the brain; 3. Ear diseases: such as the occurrence of sudden deafness, Meniere’s disease or otitis media, which usually produce tinnitus, but may also produce tinnitus, resulting in symptoms of zipping sound in the brain; 4. Brain diseases: such as cerebrovascular malformation, cerebral hemangioma or stroke, etc., often produce the situation of insufficient blood supply to the brain, which may lead to the situation of tinnitus and produce the symptom of tizzy ringing in the head; 5. Triglycerides: Patients with a history of hypertension, hyperlipidemia and diabetes are likely to cause atherosclerosis in the brain, which affects the blood supply to the brain and may produce the situation of tinnitus, leading to the patient’s consciousness of tizzy ringing in the brain.