By Dr. Jennifer Gans
For many individuals, tinnitus becomes noticeable or more bothersome during or after a cancer diagnosis. In this context, the experience can feel especially concerning, as it appears alongside an already overwhelming and life-altering event.
To understand why this happens, it is important to recognize that cancer is not only a medical condition—it is also a traumatic experience for the brain and nervous system.
A cancer diagnosis immediately shifts the brain into a state of high alert.
The nervous system becomes organized around one central question:
“Is something wrong?”
From that point forward, attention is drawn inward.
Patients are asked repeatedly:
At the same time, the body is undergoing:
This combination reinforces a state of constant vigilance.
The brain is not relaxed. It is scanning.
In a state of stress or trauma, the brain prioritizes protection over accuracy.
It becomes more sensitive to:
This is adaptive in the short term.
But it also increases the likelihood that the brain will misinterpret benign sensations as meaningful or threatening.
Tinnitus may emerge during this time for two reasons:
A sound that might previously have gone unnoticed is now detected.
When tinnitus is first noticed in this heightened state, the brain asks:
“What is this?”
“Is this related to my cancer?”
“Is this a problem?”
Because the nervous system is already activated, the brain is more likely to interpret the sound as:
This is the moment where the system can begin to get stuck.
Once tinnitus is labeled as a potential threat:
The person may start to:
This creates a reinforcing loop:
The system becomes self-reinforcing.
Even if the original trigger (treatment, stress, or hearing change) stabilizes, the brain may remain in this loop.
This is not simply about tinnitus.
This is about a brain that has been through a threatening experience and has learned:
“I need to keep checking. I need to stay alert.”
Tinnitus becomes one of the signals the brain attaches to this protective pattern.
The sound itself is benign.
But the brain’s response has become conditioned and persistent.
When the brain is in a trauma-informed state:
This is why tinnitus can feel “stuck” in this context.
The brain is not trying to hold onto the sound.
It is trying to maintain safety.
The goal is not to eliminate the sound.
The goal is to help the brain update its understanding:
“This signal is not dangerous.”
“I do not need to monitor this.”
This shift occurs through:
As the brain begins to feel safe again, it can move out of constant vigilance.
When the nervous system settles:
The brain no longer needs to treat tinnitus as a signal of concern.
The system unsticks itself.
Tinnitus in the context of cancer is not just about the ears.
It reflects a brain that has been asked to operate in a prolonged state of threat detection and protection.
Sometimes, the system does not immediately turn off when the danger has passed.
With understanding and support, the brain can relearn that it is safe.
And when it does, tinnitus often fades into the background—no longer a signal to monitor, but simply a sound that no longer matters.
Many people understand tinnitus intellectually, but still find themselves reacting to the sound.
That is where guided practice becomes important.
If you would like support applying this in daily life, you can explore an 8-week program at MindfulTinnitusRelief.com.