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What do you know about a Rx called "AntiVert?"
I'm asking because other people I've heard from who have the same trouble I do hearing a low frequency hum have said that AntiVert made the hum go away. After six months I still have this problem, which I originally posted about here:
http://goldismoney.info/forums/showthread.php?t=385031 I think I've tried everything, believing that the humming noise was being caused by something that needed repair or replacement. At first I thought it had to do with a leak in the water lines somewhere, or that it was air in the water lines I was hearing. However, after replacing all of the leaky faucets, hose bibs, valves, etc, the humming noise persisted. On more than one occasion I cut the water off at the main, but still the problem went on with no change or any difference. Then I thought it might be something electrical, so I called an electrician buddy of mine. He said "cut the power at the main and see if you still hear it." I cut the power but still head it. So, his theory was that it was the alarm system. He said that when they start to go bad they'll emit a low frequency hum just like I described. because they have battery backups they'll still be powered if the power goes down, thus the continuing hum. With that in mind I had the alarm company techs disconnect the entire system for just a couple days last week: from the AC electricity and the batteries as well. Still the hum persisted, no change. I am at a real loss here. What else can it be if it isn't the electricity, the alarm system, or the water? I guess it has to be something wrong with me. So I'm going to go see the doctor and get checked out and see if it's me. I don't hear the hum anywhere except inside the house, but nothing I've tried is working so I don't know what else to do. Other people who say they suffered from this trouble reported good results after being prescribed AntiVert. They said it made the hum go away. You can read about it and what they said, here: http://www.abovetopsecret.com/forum/thread184143/pg1 I don't like taking pills if I don't have to, but I can't sleep on account of this f%ckin' hum. I feel tired and listless all the time and it never gets better. Sometimes I think I'm keeping the company that makes 5 Hour Energy drinks in business single-handedly. It's reached a point where I can't work or get things done without that stuff. That can't be good for me, either. Any thoughts on this subject are gratefully appreciated. Thanks for reading... 7 |
Re: What do you know about a Rx called "AntiVert?"
Why are you considering drugs when you said it goes away when you're not home?
I suggest that, that cheap property you bought under the high tension powerlines might be the cause. j/k Has to be a motor somewhere close to you, maybe a neighbor? |
Re: What do you know about a Rx called "AntiVert?"
"Meclizine (proposed INN is meclozine) is an antihistamine considered to be an antiemetic.[1] It is sold under the brand names of Bonine, Bonamine, Antivert, Postafen, and Dramamine (Less Drowsy Formulation), and is most commonly used to inhibit nausea and vomiting."
CREATE the problem....SOLVE the problem...with yet another drug. |
Re: What do you know about a Rx called "AntiVert?"
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I figured a trip to the doc and/or hearing test would (hopefully) be able to rule me out as the source (if it isn't me, I mean)... |
Re: What do you know about a Rx called "AntiVert?"
My ears have rang ever since I can remember. High pitch.. almost the exact same as the whine you hear when you turn off an old tube tv.
I found a 22 shell when I was 3 or 4 and hit it with a hammer... BOOM. I think that is where it comes from. I sleep with a fan on every night to drown out the noise. It gets worse when I am tired, and really bad when I get stopped up from allergies... No High BP or lack of minerals. |
Re: What do you know about a Rx called "AntiVert?"
I take antivert on a regular basis because of incapacting vertigo attacks. It will knock you into the dirt. I have a fair tolerance to it but I gave one to a coworker one day and she went home early and slept 18 hours straight. Not only do you sleep but you have a hangover.. Only something as serious as severe vertigo would make me take it.
I also have tinnitus.. The ringing in the ear stuff.. You have to learn to ignore it. It might be what you have and s certain frequency sets it off. When I was young I could not go into museums because something in the alarms would set mine off. Something in your house is setting it off because of a frequency.. I dont find antivert all that helpful for the ringing.. |
Re: What do you know about a Rx called "AntiVert?"
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I have tried every natural cure out there.. none worked. I wish they had. |
Re: What do you know about a Rx called "AntiVert?"
You should go backpacking or camping way out in the boonies for a few days to see if it goes away. I can hear my appliances and chargers running, I bet that is a factor in what you hear.
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Re: What do you know about a Rx called "AntiVert?"
I think these might help you,
http://www.bose.com/assets/images/sh...qc15_si_qc.jpg my father has a set and he claims that they really do cancel the noise.... (my dad uses them when he mows) not cheap though (look on Ebay for a deal) ..........certainly safer than drugs:coolbeer: These headphones hush ambient noise by creating antinoise that obviates the noise at your ear. They don't eliminate noise, but the better models significantly reduce the whoosh of airplanes' air-conditioning systems. (They're somewhat less effective at quieting the background din on trains and buses.) Noise-canceling headphones come in all forms, from full size to earbuds. Since you no longer have to crank up the volume to overcome background noise, this type of headphone lets you listen at lower levels, which leads to reduced ear fatigue. You'll also hear more low-level detail in your music. http://www.bose.com/controller?event...9677&src=k9677 Our best headphones. Quieter than ever before. Bose was the first to introduce noise cancelling headphones over 20 years ago. And we've conducted ongoing research to improve the technology ever since. New QuietComfort 15 headphones feature our latest advances, reducing even more noise across the full range of human hearing―and making your world quieter than ever before. This quieter listening experience, combined with Bose� quality sound, can reveal nuances in your music you've never noticed before. |
Re: What do you know about a Rx called "AntiVert?"
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At least find out if it is you or your environment. Though on second thought, it may be both; let me explain. I am a "sensitive" to ELF waves[extremely low frequency waves]. Never knew I was for 50 plus years until the chemtrail spraying started. Now when the metals they are spraying at altitute settle down closer to earth I get a high pitched whine in my head[like the superchargers on a diesel locomotive a few blocks away]. This varies in intensity according to how much electronic "noise" I am immersed in; ie the bigger the city I am in the more it hurts. I think the metal particles allow these ELF waves to propagate stronger and farther. This might be what you are "hearing" in your urban environment. |
Re: What do you know about a Rx called "AntiVert?"
For sure finding out if it's me or something else is my next step. Friends who stay here overnight say they can sometimes hear this hum, and that it's not me. We shall see. I've tried everything I can think of so far, but determining the source of this hum is where I'm stuck for the moment. The spraying factor has me wondering about that, now. I hadn't considered that before...
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Re: What do you know about a Rx called "AntiVert?"
I have tinnitus, a high pitched sound. There's only one place it went away: Badwater, Death Valley, a 2 mile hike onto the salt pan. An audiologist told me that that the damaged nerves are stimulated by any sound, and there was absolutely none there. The dryness of the spot probably contributed to the blissful silence.
Alas, they won't let me build there. |
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