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  • Can Diabetes Cause Ringing in Ears? The Uncomfortable Truth

Can Diabetes Cause Ringing in Ears? The Uncomfortable Truth

Diabetes
September 8, 2025
• 11 min read
Dhruv Sharma
Written by
Dhruv Sharma
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Can Diabetes Cause Ringing in Ears The Uncomfortable Truth

If you’re living with diabetes, you’re used to keeping an eye on your blood sugar, your feet, and your vision. But what about your ears?

If you’ve ever been sitting in a quiet room and heard a faint ringing, buzzing, or hissing sound that nobody else can hear, you’ve experienced tinnitus. It’s a common and often annoying condition. And you might be surprised to learn that it has a significant connection to diabetes.

So, can diabetes cause ringing in your ears? The short answer is yes, absolutely. Diabetes doesn’t just affect your blood sugar; it can damage tiny, delicate nerves and blood vessels throughout your body, including those in your inner ear that are crucial for hearing.

This article will break down this connection in simple terms. We’ll explore exactly how high blood sugar leads to that frustrating ringing sound, what you can do about it, and how to protect your hearing for the long run. Let’s dive in.

What Exactly is Tinnitus? Understanding the Ringing in Your Ears

Before we connect the dots to diabetes, it’s important to understand what we’re dealing with. Tinnitus (pronounced tin-NIGHT-us or TIN-it-us) isn’t a disease itself. It’s a symptom, a signal that something else is going on in your auditory system, which includes your ear, the auditory nerve connected to your brain, and the parts of your brain that process sound.

People describe tinnitus in many different ways:

  • Ringing (the most common description)
  • Buzzing
  • Hissing
  • Humming
  • Roaring
  • Clicking
  • Whooshing (often related to blood flow)

For most people, it’s a subjective sound—meaning only they can hear it. It can be constant or it can come and go. It can be barely noticeable or so loud it makes it hard to concentrate or hear actual sounds. The key thing to remember is that it’s a real experience, and if you have it, you’re not imagining things.

Can Diabetes Cause Ringing in Ears?

Yes, diabetes can cause ringing in the ears (tinnitus). The uncomfortable truth is that high blood sugar levels over time can damage small blood vessels and nerves in the body — including those in the inner ear. This damage can reduce blood flow and harm the auditory nerves, leading to hearing issues like tinnitus, hearing loss, or balance problems.

How Can Diabetes Cause Ringing in the Ears? The Direct Link

Diabetes is a condition where your body either doesn’t make enough insulin (Type 1) or can’t use the insulin it makes effectively (Type 2). This leads to high levels of sugar, or glucose, in your blood.

Over time, this high blood sugar acts like a slow poison. It can cause immense damage to your body’s infrastructure: your nerves and your blood vessels. This is why diabetes is linked to so many complications, from heart disease to kidney failure. And your ears are not spared from this damage.

Here’s the step-by-step process of how diabetes leads to tinnitus.

High Blood Sugar Damages Nerves (Neuropathy)

You may have heard of diabetic neuropathy—nerve damage that often causes tingling, pain, or numbness in the hands and feet. The same process can happen to the nerves in your ear.

  • The Auditory Nerve: This is the main nerve that carries sound signals from your inner ear to your brain. When high blood sugar damages this nerve, the signals get scrambled.
  • Faulty Signals: Imagine a phone line with a lot of static. The brain doesn’t receive a clear signal from the ear, so it tries to interpret the noise. This misinterpretation often results in the brain “filling in the gap” with a phantom sound—the ringing we know as tinnitus.

High Blood Sugar Damages Blood Vessels

This is perhaps the even bigger culprit. Your inner ear is home to the cochlea, a tiny, snail-shaped organ that is filled with fluid and thousands of incredibly delicate hair cells. These hair cells are responsible for translating sound vibrations into electrical signals for the brain.

  • Tiny, Delicate Vessels: The cochlea is fed by a tiny network of blood vessels, some of the smallest in the entire body. They are extremely fragile and susceptible to damage.
  • Reduced Blood Flow: When high blood sugar damages these micro-blood vessels, it reduces the flow of oxygen-rich blood to the inner ear.
  • Starving the Hair Cells: Without a proper supply of oxygen and nutrients, the delicate hair cells in the cochlea become damaged or even die. Unlike other cells in your body, these hair cells do not grow back. When they are damaged, they can’t send proper signals to the brain. Once again, the brain gets confused and may generate its own noise to compensate for the lack of clear input, leading to tinnitus.

Diabetic Hearing Loss: The Partner in Crime to Tinnitus

Tinnitus rarely happens in a vacuum. It’s very often a companion to hearing loss. In fact, for many people, tinnitus is the first noticeable sign that their hearing is declining.

Studies have shown that people with diabetes are twice as likely to experience hearing loss as those without the condition. The same exact mechanisms are at work:

  1. Nerve Damage to the auditory nerve.
  2. Blood Vessel Damage to the cochlea, killing off hair cells.

This combination of hearing loss and tinnitus is a double whammy. As you lose the ability to hear external sounds clearly, the internal sound of tinnitus often becomes more prominent and bothersome. Managing your diabetes effectively is one of the most powerful ways to protect your remaining hearing and potentially reduce the severity of tinnitus.

Other Diabetes-Related Factors That Can Worsen Tinnitus

While nerve and blood vessel damage are the primary links, diabetes can contribute to tinnitus in other indirect ways.

Medications

Some medications used to treat diabetes or its complications can be “ototoxic,” meaning they can be harmful to the ear. Some of these drugs might cause or worsen tinnitus as a side effect.

Important: Never stop taking a prescribed medication without talking to your doctor. If you suspect your medication is affecting your hearing, have a conversation with your doctor. They may be able to adjust your dose or switch you to a different medication that doesn’t have this side effect.

High Blood Pressure (Hypertension)

Diabetes and high blood pressure often go hand-in-hand. Hypertension itself can force blood through your vessels with more power, and you can sometimes hear this as a “pulsatile tinnitus” that beats in time with your heartbeat. This type of tinnitus specifically points to a blood flow issue.

Stress and Depression

Managing a chronic condition like diabetes can be incredibly stressful. Stress and anxiety are well-known triggers for making tinnitus seem much worse. It creates a vicious cycle: tinnitus causes stress, and that stress makes you focus on the tinnitus even more, making it appear louder and more irritating.

What Should You Do If You Have Diabetes and Notice Ringing?

If you’ve started to notice a persistent ringing in your ears, don’t panic, but don’t ignore it either. It’s your body sending you a signal. Here is a clear action plan.

1. Talk to Your Primary Doctor or Endocrinologist

This is your first and most important step. Tell them:

  • When the ringing started.
  • What it sounds like (ringing, buzzing, etc.).
  • If it’s in one ear or both.
  • If it’s constant or comes and goes.
    Your diabetes doctor will likely want to check your most recent A1C levels (your average blood sugar over 3 months) to see if poor glucose control might be the root cause.

2. Get a Comprehensive Hearing Test

Your doctor will probably refer you to an audiologist or an ear, nose, and throat (ENT) doctor. These are hearing specialists. They will conduct a painless hearing test (audiogram) to assess the type and degree of any hearing loss and discuss your tinnitus in detail.

3. Tighten Up Your Diabetes Management

This is the most effective thing you can do to address the root cause. Work with your doctor to:

  • Improve Your Blood Sugar Control: Aim for your target blood sugar and A1C levels. Stabilizing your glucose is the single best way to prevent further damage to your ears.
  • Manage Your Blood Pressure and Cholesterol: Keeping these numbers in a healthy range will protect your blood vessels everywhere, including your ears.
  • Adopt a Healthier Lifestyle: Focus on a diabetes-friendly diet, regular exercise, and maintaining a healthy weight. This benefits your entire body.

How to Manage and Live with Tinnitus

While there is no definitive “cure” for most types of tinnitus, especially that caused by nerve damage, there are many highly effective ways to manage it and reduce its impact on your life.

Sound Therapy: Don’t Sit in Silence

Silence is tinnitus’s best friend. When it’s quiet, the ringing seems louder. Sound therapy uses external sounds to help mask or distract you from the tinnitus.

  • White Noise Machines: These devices create a steady, soothing sound like static, rain, or ocean waves.
  • Fans and Air Purifiers: Simple household items can provide enough background noise.
  • Smartphone Apps: There are many free and paid apps designed specifically for tinnitus relief with a variety of masking sounds.
  • Low-Level Music: Playing soft music or podcasts in the background, especially when falling asleep, can be very helpful.

Hearing Aids: A Two-for-One Solution

If your tinnitus is paired with hearing loss, hearing aids are often the best solution. Modern hearing aids do two things:

  1. They amplify external sounds, making it easier to hear the world around you.
  2. Many come with built-in tinnitus masking features that can play a soft, soothing sound to counteract the ringing.

By making it easier to hear real sounds, your brain has less need to “create” its own noise, making the tinnitus less noticeable.

Stress Reduction Techniques

Since stress amplifies tinnitus, learning to relax can turn the volume down.

  • Exercise: Physical activity is a fantastic stress reliever and helps manage blood sugar.
  • Meditation and Mindfulness: These practices teach you to acknowledge the tinnitus without reacting to it with stress or anxiety, which can lessen its power over you.
  • Deep Breathing and Yoga: Excellent for calming the nervous system.

Protecting Your Ears from Further Damage

If you have diabetes, your ears are already more vulnerable. It’s crucial to protect them from other common causes of hearing damage.

  • Wear Ear Protection: If you’re going to be around loud noises (concerts, mowing the lawn, using power tools), wear earplugs or protective earmuffs.
  • Keep Headphone Volume Low: Follow the 60/60 rule: listen at no more than 60% volume for no longer than 60 minutes at a time.

Real-Life Scenario: Maria’s Story

To understand how this all comes together, let’s consider a real-life example. Meet Maria, a 58-year-old teacher diagnosed with Type 2 diabetes ten years ago.

For years, Maria’s blood sugar control was inconsistent. She’d watch her diet for a few months, then slip back into old habits. Her last A1C was 8.5%, higher than her target of 7.0%. Recently, she started noticing a constant, high-pitched ringing in both ears, especially when she was grading papers in her quiet living room at night. It was distracting and made it hard to focus.

She also found herself asking her students to repeat themselves more often and turning up the volume on her television. She initially blamed it on “just getting older.” But when the ringing became too persistent to ignore, she mentioned it to her endocrinologist during her regular appointment.

Her doctor explained the link between her prolonged periods of high blood sugar and the potential damage to the tiny vessels and nerves in her ears. He referred her to an audiologist, who confirmed a mild high-frequency hearing loss, consistent with diabetic-related damage.

This was the wake-up call Maria needed. She started working closely with a diabetes educator to revamp her diet and began a daily walking routine. She focused intensely on keeping her blood sugar within her target range. After a few months, her A1C dropped to 7.2%. While the tinnitus didn’t completely disappear, it became much less noticeable. Combined with a white noise machine at night and a new focus on stress management, Maria felt back in control. Her story shows that while the damage might not be fully reversible, proactive management can significantly improve your quality of life.

Expert Contribution: An Audiologist’s Perspective

We reached out to Dr. Sarah Jenkins, an audiologist with over 15 years of experience working with patients with chronic conditions like diabetes, to provide her professional insight.

“Many of my patients are surprised when I ask about their blood sugar levels and diabetes status,” says Dr. Jenkins. “The connection is not yet common knowledge, but it’s incredibly important. From my clinical perspective, I see a clear pattern: patients with poorly managed diabetes often present with a specific type of bilateral (both ears), sensorineural hearing loss that progresses faster than what we see in age-related hearing loss alone. The accompanying tinnitus is often a significant complaint.”

Dr. Jenkins emphasizes the importance of a holistic approach. “My role isn’t just to test hearing. It’s to connect the dots for the patient. I often tell them, ‘What’s good for your diabetes is good for your ears.’ Managing blood sugar, cardiovascular health, and stress isn’t just a note from their primary doctor; it’s a direct prescription for hearing health. The most successful patients are those who see their diabetes team and hearing specialist as one united front. Early intervention is key—don’t wait until the hearing loss is severe. If you have diabetes and notice any changes, get a baseline hearing test. It gives us a crucial point of comparison for the future.”

Recommendations Grounded in Proven Research and Facts

The advice surrounding diabetes and tinnitus isn’t just anecdotal; it’s supported by scientific studies and major health institutions. Here’s a breakdown of the research-backed recommendations:

  1. The Power of Glycemic Control: A large study published in the Annals of Internal Medicine found that participants with diabetes were more than twice as likely to have hearing impairment as those without. The study concluded that poor glycemic control over time was a significant risk factor. The recommendation is clear: achieving and maintaining a target A1C level (usually below 7% for most adults, as per the American Diabetes Association) is the single most effective strategy to prevent and slow the progression of hearing damage.
  2. The Heart-Ear Connection: The National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders (NIDCD) states that conditions that affect blood flow, such as diabetes and hypertension, can directly impact hearing. Their research recommends managing cardiovascular health as a primary method of protecting your ears. This means regular monitoring of blood pressure and cholesterol, and adhering to medication and lifestyle changes to keep them in a healthy range.
  3. Noise Protection is Non-Negotiable: Research from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) shows that people with diabetes are more susceptible to noise-induced hearing damage. Their fact-based recommendation is that individuals with diabetes must be extra vigilant about protecting their ears from loud environments. Using custom-fitted or over-the-counter ear protection in noisy settings is not just advised; it is considered a critical preventive measure.
  4. Evidence for Sound Therapy: Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) and sound therapy are among the most researched and recommended management techniques for tinnitus by organizations like the American Tinnitus Association. Studies show that using sound generators or hearing aids with masking features can significantly reduce the perceived burden and annoyance of tinnitus, improving daily functioning and sleep.

By following these research-grounded recommendations, you are not just guessing what might work. You are taking actions that have been scientifically proven to make a difference in protecting your hearing and managing tinnitus.

FAQ: Your Questions About Diabetes and Ringing in Ears, Answered

Q1: Can prediabetes cause tinnitus?

Yes, it can. Prediabetes means your blood sugar levels are higher than normal but not yet high enough to be diagnosed as Type 2 diabetes. This elevated blood sugar can still cause early damage to blood vessels and nerves, including those in your inner ear. If you have prediabetes and notice tinnitus, see it as a warning sign to take action with your health.

Q2: Can metformin or other diabetes drugs cause tinnitus?

Metformin is not commonly associated with tinnitus. However, as mentioned, some other medications can be ototoxic. A specific class of drugs called “loop diuretics” (sometimes used for high blood pressure, which is common in diabetes) can sometimes cause tinnitus. Always review the side effects of your medications with your doctor or pharmacist.

Q3: Will lowering my blood sugar make the ringing stop?

It might, especially if the tinnitus is recent and related to a period of very high blood sugar. Improving your blood sugar control can prevent the damage from getting worse and may improve symptoms. However, if the hair cells or nerves are permanently damaged, the tinnitus may not go away completely. The goal then becomes management and prevention of further worsening.

Q4: Is the ringing a sign of high or low blood sugar?

Tinnitus is generally associated with long-term high blood sugar (hyperglycemia) that causes damage over time. It is not typically a direct, immediate symptom of high or low blood sugar (hypoglycemia) in the moment. However, the stress of a hypoglycemic episode could potentially make existing tinnitus seem temporarily worse.

Q5: What does it mean if the ringing is only in one ear?

While diabetes typically affects both ears equally, tinnitus in one ear only should always be evaluated by a doctor. It can sometimes be related to other issues, such as a build-up of earwax, an ear infection, or in very rare cases, a tumor on the auditory nerve (which is usually non-cancerous). An ENT specialist can help rule out these other causes.

Q6: Are there any vitamins or supplements that can help?

Some research suggests that deficiencies in certain vitamins like B12 can be linked to tinnitus and neuropathy. Since diabetes can sometimes lead to vitamin deficiencies, it’s worth having your levels checked. However, always talk to your doctor before starting any new supplements, as they can interact with your diabetes medications.

Q7: Can reversing Type 2 diabetes reverse tinnitus?

If you put Type 2 diabetes into remission through significant lifestyle changes (meaning your blood sugar levels remain in a non-diabetic range without medication), you may halt the progression of hearing damage and potentially see an improvement in tinnitus symptoms. However, any permanent damage that has already occurred cannot be reversed.


Final Thoughts

The connection between diabetes and ringing in the ears is clear and scientifically proven. It serves as a crucial reminder that diabetes is a whole-body condition. That persistent ring isn’t just an annoyance; it’s a message from your body.

The good news is that by taking proactive control of your diabetes—managing your blood sugar, blood pressure, and overall health—you are not just protecting your heart and kidneys. You are also taking vital steps to preserve your precious sense of hearing and find peace and quiet from the sound of tinnitus.

Don’t suffer in silence. Talk to your doctor, get your hearing checked, and take back control. Your ears will thank you for it.

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