Audizen Reviews
Key Ingredients & How It’s Supposed to Work
To assess such a product, it’s important to look at what it contains, what it claims to do, and whether there is plausible mechanism or evidence.
Ingredients
From the launch announcement and product literature, some of the ingredients listed include:
· Ginkgo biloba extract – claimed to improve circulation, including micro-circulation to nerves.
· Magnesium (as magnesium citrate) – noted for nerve function and muscle relaxation.
· Vitamin B12 (methylcobalamin) – important in nerve health and myelin sheath maintenance. Hibiscus extract – claimed anti-inflammatory and antioxidant effect.
· Alpha-Lipoic Acid (ALA) – antioxidant and nerve-protection focus. Hawthorn berry extract – circulatory/antioxidant claim.
· Gymnema sylvestre – described as adaptogenic/nerve-soothing.
· A “Neurocalm Blend” – proprietary mix of “adaptogenic herbs and nerve-supporting nutrients”.
· Proposed Mechanisms
According to the promotional narrative, Audizen Drops works via several pathways:
· Reducing inflammation around nerves or in the auditory pathways (hibiscus, hawthorn, ALA)
· Supporting nerve health (Vitamin B12, magnesium)
· Improving circulation to auditory/nerve tissues (Ginkgo biloba, hawthorn)
· Modulating pain or irritation signals from nerves (Gymnema sylvestre, Neurocalm)
· The liquid (drop) format is claimed to allow faster absorption, particularly sublingually (under the tongue) which bypasses parts of the digestive tract.
· Thus, the promise is that by supporting nerve health and improving circulation + reducing nerve irritation, the ringing, buzzing or hearing ‘noise’ may diminish, and overall auditory clarity may improve.
What the Research & Evidence Say
When reviewing any health supplement, one must ask: is there solid independent evidence for the product specifically, or at least for its ingredients in the context of the claimed condition?
Evidence for individual ingredients
· Ginkgo biloba has been studied in various contexts including circulation, memory, and in some cases tinnitus or hearing issues. Some meta-analyses show mild benefit in certain patients, but results are mixed.
· Vitamin B12 is known to be important in nerve health; deficiency of B12 is clearly linked to neuropathy and other nerve issues. So if a person is B12 deficient, supplementation makes sense.
· Alpha-Lipoic Acid has been studied in neuropathy (for example diabetic neuropathy) and has shown some benefit in reducing pain or burning sensations.
· Magnesium and general nerve-function nutrients also have plausible theoretical benefit.
· However, many of the other herbs (hibiscus, hawthorn, gymnema) have limited data specifically for tinnitus or hearing clarity.
Evidence for Audizen Drops itself
I found no published independent randomized controlled trial (RCT) specifically for Audizen Drops as of now. The launch article describes the formula and theory, but not a published peer-reviewed clinical trial. Some forum users raise red flags: for example on a tinnitus forum one user comments:
“Audizen is a SCAM. Do not buy.” Another points out that the promotional campaign uses videos with questionable credibility, and little independent evidence.
What this means
Because of the absence of independent clinical trials specific to the product, one cannot reliably say it works for all or even most people. The ingredients individually have some supportive data for nerve/nerve-irritation conditions, but tinnitus and hearing clarity are complex, often multi-factorial, and may be structural (e.g., inner ear damage, nerve damage) rather than just nutrient-deficiency or inflammation.
Therefore, while Audizen Drops may help some people (especially if there is a deficiency or mild nerve irritation/inflammation component), it cannot be assumed to be a cure-all or guaranteed to fix hearing loss or tinnitus for everyone.
Official website:- https://finance.yahoo.com/news/audizen-drops-officially-launched-natural-175100272.html?guccounter=1

