Damien Cavanagh
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  • I'm sure H is the brain's way to protect damaged ears from more harm. If the H goes, great, but stay on your guard, or the T will spike.
    The docs says ears don't regenerate (we know better!) Plus I suppose the brain is rewiring itself, reassigning hairs to higher frequencies.
    Strife_84
    The hair cells in ear don't grow back.
    Damien Cavanagh
    ... but the brain compensates by rewiring. My higher frequencies have come back.
    @MarkX Also have non-somatic hiss in L ear. Got T through years of drumming and one particular noise trauma last Oct.
    M
    Sorry it's still bad. I also have somatic t on my left ear. 3 months in. Idk why I got it. No noise trauma. Maybe stress?
    8 months in. H is much better :) somatic hissing/static pulsating T still bad :-(
    M
    yours is somatic? when you move your neck or jaw? How did you get T?
    Watched the film "All Is Lost" last night. Great film, plus the ocean and storm sounds were very soothing for lug-holes :)
    Damn, def increase in hissing in both ears today after foolishness 3 days ago. Delayed spike. Slid down a snake to where I was 2 months ago.
    Hi Bill Even when the hiss has 'gone' there's always something- the softest hiss or an ambience which is not quite a tone but not silent.
    Hiss disappear for an hour or so today, so back to intermittent :)
    Bill Bauer
    The next time it disappears, please trying inserting earplugs and seeing whether you can hear anything. Thank you!
    L ear hiss intermittent until yesterday, when somebody whacked a bass/kick drum before I could protect myself.
    Damien Cavanagh
    Drum was in owner's kitchen(!) Prob around 100dB, like a very loud door slam.
    Damien Cavanagh
    Hiss now constant again. Will update if it returns to intermittent, as many people are interested in spikes.
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