Every once in a while I find myself with an itch deep inside my ear canal. Oddly enough, the only way I can “scratch” the itch is by rubbing my tongue against the roof of the mouth. Annoying, as it doesn’t really go away until enough time has passed. Bewildering because I have no idea how the roof of my mouth any my inner ear could be connected.
Does anybody else experience this, and does anybody have any idea why it happens?
Interestingly enough, I can make my ear canal itch by rubbing my tongue across my upper palate. True entertainment is watching me twitch uncontrollably when I accidentally perform said operation…
I’ve been searching through my medical books for the answer to this question Mofo, but haven’t found one that really explains the phenomenon. My best guess is that it has something to do with the eustachian tube (a tube that joins the nasopharynx to the middle ear cavity). My medical dictionary goes on to state that this tube is usually closed but opens during yawning, chewing and swallowing to equalize pressure in the middle ear. I assume that when your ear itches, you move your tounge in such a way that the pressure in your inner ear is changed and which also releives the itching sensation. I plan on shaking down the local ENT for the proper information.
I still don’t understand why this went to IMHO rather than General Questions. I wasn’t really trying to find a survery of people who had the same experience. I was trying to find an answer to a stupid experience most people have had.
I can’t effectively plug my nose with my tongue. Does it have anything to do with the pressurization of your head? Flying quite a bit, I realized that faking a yawn would help to equalize the pressure in my head.