Jugular bulb elevation is not the name of a disease; it is simply an anatomical term used to describe the location of the jugular bulb. The jugular bulb is a bend in the jugular vein vessels outside the skull that is shaped like a sphere, hence the name jugular bulb. The jugular bulb is located just below the zygomatic bone and connected to the lower wall of the ear canal, and the high jugular bulb is usually congenital and innate as a result of congenital development. However, due to the venous blood flowing within it, tinnitus or hearing loss can sometimes occur, but it is usually not permanent, so surgery on the jugular bulb is not necessary in most cases. If the hearing has been significantly affected, surgery may be performed. Also, because the jugular bulb is a large turn of a blood vessel that bleeds easily, surgery to remove it is only necessary in such cases when one has a condition called jugular bulb tumor, which may gradually appear as an enlarged bulb due to growth and may compress the surrounding veins.