The Claim

Lipo-flavonoid, ginkgo, and sound therapy apps produce no clinically significant reduction or improvement in tinnitus symptoms.

What the research says

Not yet evaluated

We are still looking at what the research says.

Supports
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Challenges
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These are independent scores, not a percentage. Higher-grade studies count more, so a single strong opposing study can outweigh several weaker ones.

Description
0 studies reviewed
In plain English

Lipo-flavonoid, ginkgo, and sound therapy apps do not produce a meaningful change in tinnitus symptoms in people who use them.

See the scientific wording

Lipo-flavonoid, ginkgo, and sound therapy apps have no clinically significant effect on tinnitus symptoms.

Why this might work

The brain's auditory system becomes overactive when the inner ear sends weaker signals, and this overactivity is perceived as ringing. Protecting the inner ear cells and improving blood flow to the ear reduces the signal loss, which allows the brain to normalize its activity. At the same time, the brain's natural ability to suppress unwanted signals is strengthened, turning down the false ringing sound.

Suggested mechanismbased on 1 study

Score breakdown, mechanism chain, raw evidence, ideal studies needed

Fit Body Science verdict — we translate health claims into clear verdicts backed by peer-reviewed research.

Not medical advice. For informational purposes only. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional before making health decisions.