The windy sound in the ears, i.e. wind-blowing tinnitus, may be related to diseases such as abnormal opening of the Eustachian tube, otosclerosis, Meniere’s disease and so on.
1. Abnormal opening of the Eustachian tube: when the Eustachian tube is often open or over-open due to various reasons, it can cause a windy sound in the ears, which is in line with the breathing rhythm; tinnitus is aggravated when taking a deep breath, swallowing, yawning, opening the mouth and speaking, which can interfere with the patient’s hearing.
2. Otosclerosis: the inner ear bone labyrinth of dense bone focal laxity leads to stapes foot plate activity is limited as a pathological feature, clinically manifested as conductive deafness of a middle ear disease. Tinnitus is accompanied by “buzzing” low-pitched tinnitus in most patients.
3. Ménière’s disease: an inner ear disease of unknown cause, with the membrane labyrinth accumulation as the main pathological feature. In addition to tinnitus, it is accompanied by vertigo and fluctuating hearing loss. The tinnitus may persist after recurrent episodes of the disease. The nature of tinnitus varies and can be low-pitched wind-scraping-like.
When you feel like the sound of wind in the ears, you can actively seek medical systematic examination, clear diagnosis, and follow the doctor’s instructions to standardize the treatment.