
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Tinnitus is often treated like an ear problem, but for people with adrenal insufficiency, the story can be much more complex. In this episode, we take a deeper look at the science behind why ringing, buzzing, hissing, or whooshing in the ears may flare during times of fatigue, illness, stress, low blood pressure, or those hard-to-explain “off” days.
We explore how tinnitus is not just about the ear itself, but about the way the brain, auditory system, nervous system, circulation, and stress-hormone pathways all interact. We talk about how cortisol helps stabilize the body, why HPA-axis disruption can make the nervous system more reactive, and why adrenal insufficiency may create the kind of internal conditions where tinnitus becomes more noticeable, more intrusive, or harder to filter out.
This episode also breaks down why tinnitus can worsen during illness, during low blood pressure or circulation changes, during sensory overload or “crash” states, and during cortisol timing dips between doses or early in the morning. We also look at primary adrenal insufficiency specifically, where aldosterone and sodium balance may add another layer by affecting fluid regulation in the inner ear.
Most importantly, this conversation keeps the science grounded. We explain what the research does support, what it does not clearly prove, and why the most accurate takeaway is not that adrenal insufficiency directly causes tinnitus in everyone, but that it can absolutely make tinnitus more reactive in a body already under physiologic strain.
If you’ve ever noticed your tinnitus flaring alongside fatigue, dizziness, illness, or stress, this episode helps connect those dots in a more meaningful way. It is about understanding the deeper “why” behind the ringing, and recognizing that your body’s systems do not work in isolation. The ear, brain, circulation, hormones, and autonomic nervous system are all part of the same conversation.
This episode covers:
If tinnitus has ever felt more intense when your body is under strain, this episode offers a deeper scientific framework for understanding why.
Learn more at www.myadrenallife.com or join our My Adrenal Life Facebook Group.
By My Adrenal LifeTinnitus is often treated like an ear problem, but for people with adrenal insufficiency, the story can be much more complex. In this episode, we take a deeper look at the science behind why ringing, buzzing, hissing, or whooshing in the ears may flare during times of fatigue, illness, stress, low blood pressure, or those hard-to-explain “off” days.
We explore how tinnitus is not just about the ear itself, but about the way the brain, auditory system, nervous system, circulation, and stress-hormone pathways all interact. We talk about how cortisol helps stabilize the body, why HPA-axis disruption can make the nervous system more reactive, and why adrenal insufficiency may create the kind of internal conditions where tinnitus becomes more noticeable, more intrusive, or harder to filter out.
This episode also breaks down why tinnitus can worsen during illness, during low blood pressure or circulation changes, during sensory overload or “crash” states, and during cortisol timing dips between doses or early in the morning. We also look at primary adrenal insufficiency specifically, where aldosterone and sodium balance may add another layer by affecting fluid regulation in the inner ear.
Most importantly, this conversation keeps the science grounded. We explain what the research does support, what it does not clearly prove, and why the most accurate takeaway is not that adrenal insufficiency directly causes tinnitus in everyone, but that it can absolutely make tinnitus more reactive in a body already under physiologic strain.
If you’ve ever noticed your tinnitus flaring alongside fatigue, dizziness, illness, or stress, this episode helps connect those dots in a more meaningful way. It is about understanding the deeper “why” behind the ringing, and recognizing that your body’s systems do not work in isolation. The ear, brain, circulation, hormones, and autonomic nervous system are all part of the same conversation.
This episode covers:
If tinnitus has ever felt more intense when your body is under strain, this episode offers a deeper scientific framework for understanding why.
Learn more at www.myadrenallife.com or join our My Adrenal Life Facebook Group.