Dr. Richard Terrier was at the top of his field — one of America's most respected neurosurgeons. But a relentless ringing in his ears was destroying everything. His hands started trembling during surgery. He couldn't focus. Colleagues noticed. Patients worried. "I had to stop operating," he admits in a shocking new interview.
Then an 88-year-old patient from Japan walked into his office. Mr. Masaru Tanaka had sharper hearing than people half his age. He competed in international memory competitions. And he'd never experienced ear ringing. His secret? A daily ritual he'd followed since childhood.
Here's what shocked Dr. Terrier: Ear ringing may not be an ear problem at all. New research points to something else — a microscopic connection between your ear and brain that scientists call the "neural junction." When this tiny wire becomes damaged, your brain may receive scrambled signals. That could be why traditional ear treatments often don't work.
Dr. Terrier spent months studying Mr. Tanaka's approach. What he discovered led him to create something he'd never seen in Western medicine — a personalized approach based on an ancient Japanese practice. The full story is told in a presentation he recently made available online.
The presentation walks through the research, explains the neural junction discovery, and shows why traditional ear treatments often miss the underlying cause. It's the same explanation he gave to colleagues at medical conferences.
Note: Due to the nature of the content, this presentation may not remain publicly available indefinitely. Watch here while access is still open.
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