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Por Qué el Zumbido Empeora al Tocarse la Cara
Neurociencia

Por Qué el Zumbido Empeora al Tocarse la Cara

If you've ever noticed your tinnitus get louder after clenching your jaw, pressing your neck, or touching your cheek — you're not imagining it. Researchers at the University of Michigan have pinpointed the exact neural mechanism behind this phenomenon.

DM
Dr. Marcus Webb Chief Medical Editor
2026-05-10 9 min de lectura 🔬 Fuentes revisadas por expertos

It happens to thousands of tinnitus sufferers daily. You're sitting quietly, the ringing is at its baseline — and then you press your finger against your jaw while thinking, or turn your head sharply, or clench your teeth for a moment. Suddenly the ringing intensifies. Changes pitch. Shifts from one ear to the other.

For years, doctors dismissed this as coincidence or anxiety. A growing body of neuroscience research now says it is neither. It is a precisely documented neurological phenomenon called somatic modulation of tinnitus — and understanding it changes everything about how we approach treatment.

Research Highlight

Referencias Científicas

  1. Shore, S.E., Zhou, J., & Bhatt, S. (2016). "Trigeminal pathways to the dorsal cochlear nucleus." Journal of Comparative Neurology. NIH PubMed. DOI: 10.1002/cne.24174
  2. Shore, S.E. et al. "Auditory-somatosensory bimodal stimulation desynchronizes brain circuitry to reduce tinnitus." Science Translational Medicine. University of Michigan Kresge Hearing Research Institute.
  3. Sanchez, T.G. & Rocha, C.B. (2011). "Diagnosis and management of somatosensory tinnitus." Clinics (São Paulo). DOI: 10.1590/S1807-59322011000600028
  4. Levine, R.A. (2004). "Somatic tinnitus." Progress in Brain Research. NIH PubMed. DOI: 10.1016/S0079-6123(03)46001-5
  5. Ralli, M. et al. (2023). "Somatic modulation in chronic tinnitus." Frontiers in Neurology. DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2023.1158895
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