Ringing in the Ears: When to See an ENT

It starts as something you barely notice. A faint hum after a loud concert. A high-pitched tone that shows up at night when the house gets quiet. Most people brush it off as temporary — and sometimes it is. But for millions of Americans, that ringing doesn’t go away. It shifts in pitch, grows louder in certain situations, and gradually becomes a persistent background feature of daily life that affects concentration, sleep, and emotional well-being in ways that are difficult to fully explain to someone who hasn’t experienced it. At ENT & Sinus Center in Rancho Cucamonga, we take ringing in the ears seriously — because what’s behind it often deserves far more attention than it gets.
What Tinnitus Actually Is
Tinnitus is the perception of sound — ringing, buzzing, hissing, clicking, or whooshing — without an external source producing it. It is not a disease itself but a symptom, which means it is often signaling something else happening in the auditory system or beyond it.
The sounds people describe vary considerably. Some hear a single steady tone. Others describe a pulsing sound that syncs with their heartbeat — a specific type called pulsatile tinnitus that carries its own set of potential causes. Some people experience tinnitus in one ear only, which is clinically significant and warrants prompt evaluation. Others hear it in both ears or as a general sensation inside the head.
Understanding which type you have, how long it has been present, whether it is stable or progressing, and what conditions seem to trigger or worsen it are all pieces of diagnostic information that a specialist needs to evaluate properly.
The Most Common Causes Worth Knowing
Tinnitus develops through several well-documented pathways. Knowing which one applies to your situation changes both the urgency and the approach to care.
- Noise-induced hearing loss is the most common underlying cause. The Inland Empire has a significant population of current and former military personnel, construction workers, manufacturing employees, and musicians — all occupations with elevated noise exposure risk. Prolonged exposure to loud sound damages the delicate hair cells in the cochlea that translate sound vibrations into electrical signals. Once those cells are damaged, they cannot regenerate, and the auditory system compensates in ways that produce phantom sound perception.
- Ear wax impaction is a simpler but surprisingly common cause that is frequently overlooked. When wax accumulates against the eardrum, it alters sound transmission in ways that can produce or worsen tinnitus. This is one of the more straightforwardly treatable causes, and ruling it out early is a basic step in any proper evaluation.
- Eustachian tube dysfunction, which is common in patients with chronic sinus and allergy problems, affects the pressure regulation in the middle ear in ways that contribute to both ear fullness and tinnitus. Given Rancho Cucamonga’s Santa Ana wind season and heavy pollen environment, this connection between sinus health and ear symptoms is one that comes up regularly in practice.
- Temporomandibular joint (TMJ) disorders affect the jaw joint directly adjacent to the ear canal and are an underrecognized driver of tinnitus — particularly the clicking or pulsing varieties. Teeth grinding, jaw clenching, and bite misalignment all fall into this category.
- Ménière’s disease is a condition of the inner ear characterized by episodes of vertigo, fluctuating hearing loss, ear fullness, and tinnitus. It requires specific diagnostic evaluation and a long-term management approach distinct from other tinnitus causes.
- Cardiovascular and blood pressure issues can produce pulsatile tinnitus that mirrors the heartbeat. When tinnitus pulses rhythmically, it warrants prompt evaluation that may extend beyond the ear itself.
The Signals That Mean See a Specialist Now
Not every episode of tinnitus demands an urgent appointment. Temporary ringing after a loud event that resolves within a day or two is common and usually benign. But certain presentations should not be waited out:
- Tinnitus in one ear only, particularly if it appeared suddenly
- Tinnitus accompanied by sudden or progressive hearing loss
- Pulsatile tinnitus that beats in rhythm with your heart
- Tinnitus paired with dizziness, vertigo, or balance problems
- Tinnitus following a head injury or ear trauma
- Tinnitus that has been present for more than two weeks without improvement
Any of these patterns indicates that something specific needs to be evaluated by an ENT— not monitored indefinitely at home.
What a Proper ENT Evaluation Looks Like
A thorough tinnitus evaluation goes well beyond a basic hearing check. It includes a detailed patient history covering noise exposure, medication use, cardiovascular health, and sinus and allergy background. Audiometric testing assesses the full range of hearing function and identifies any associated hearing loss. Physical examination of the ear canal, eardrum, and nasal passages identifies structural contributors. In cases involving pulsatile tinnitus or one-sided presentations, imaging may be warranted.
The goal isn’t just to confirm that tinnitus is present — it’s to understand why, so that treatment can be directed at something real rather than aimed at a symptom in isolation.
Don’t Wait for It to Get Louder
Tinnitus that is evaluated early is tinnitus that has more treatment options available. Delaying evaluation for months or years may allow some underlying causes to remain unidentified or untreated. At ENT & Sinus Center in Rancho Cucamonga, we take the time to investigate what’s behind your symptoms — not just manage the sound you’re hearing.
Ready to find out what your ears have been trying to tell you? Schedule your appointment with ENT & Sinus Center now!


