Ototoxic Drugs Exposed reveals the ear-damaging side effects (hearing loss, tinnitus, balance problems, etc.) of 877 drugs, 35 herbals and 148 chemicals. More importantly, this book explains how you can avoid or reduce the risk to your ears from ototoxic drugs.
Take Control of Your Tinnitus—Here’s How
If your ears ring, buzz, chirp, hiss, click or roar, you know just how annoying tinnitus can be. You do not have to put up with this racket for the rest of your life. This book teaches you many things you can do to help bring your tinnitus under your control so it no longer bothers you.
Hypersensitive to Sound?
If some (or all) normal sounds seem so loud they “blow the top of your head off”, or make you wince or jump, or cause you headaches or ear pain, or affect your balance, or result in fear or annoyance of sounds so you feel you have to avoid these sounds, this book is for you!
Phantom Voices, Ethereal Music & Other Spooky Sounds
When hard of hearing people begin hearing phantom sounds (voices or music), they immediately worry they are going crazy. This book reveals what Musical Ear Syndrome (MES) is, what causes these phantom sounds and what you can do to deal with them and regain your peace of mind.
Say Good Bye to Meniere’s Disease
Severe Meniere’s disease is not something you ever want to experience. In this book, not only will you learn what it’s like to have Meniere’s disease, but you will learn about the latest discovery of the underlying cause of Meniere’s disease and the simple treatment that let’s you wave good bye to your Meniere’s disease.
Keys to Successfully Living With Your Hearing Loss
This book explains the six critical keys you have to deal with in order to live a happy, fulfilled life as a hard of hearing person. Each easy-to-read chapter explains in detail what is involved in successfully implementing each key into your life.
The Relative Ototoxicity of Non-Steroidal Anti-Inflammatory Drugs
This special report is designed to help you and your doctor quickly choose the least-ototoxic non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug(s) (Acetic acids, COX-2 Inhibitors, Fenamates, Oxicams, Propionic acids, Salicylates and Miscellaneous NSAIDs) that may help you, yet at the same time, greatly reduce your risk of getting ototoxic (ear damaging) side effects.
The Relative Ototoxicity of Anti-Hypertensive Drugs
This special report is designed to help you and your doctor quickly choose the least-ototoxic anti-hypertensive drug(s) (Alpha blockers, ACE Inhibitors, Angiotensin-2-Receptor blockers, Beta blockers and Calcium-Channel blockers) that may help you, yet at the same time, greatly reduce your risk of getting ototoxic (ear damaging) side effects.
PockeTalker 2.0
The PockeTalker 2.0 lets you communicate effectively one-to-one—even in noisy places! This powerful, slim, ergonomically designed amplifier couldn’t be easier to use. Simply plug in the headphones or ear buds, position the microphone near the person you are trying to hear, adjust the volume—and enjoy listening again.
Super-directional Handheld Microphone
This super-directional handheld microphone is ideal for use in noisy places. Just aim it at the speaker. The louder the background noise, the closer you need to be to the speaker in order to hear beautiful, clear sound. Optimal range is between 5 and 20 feet. Works well with the PockeTalker.
- 1
- 2
- 3
- 4
- Next Page »