Agree. I believe those supplements are important early on to help mitigate Glutamate excitotoxicity and allow your synapses to heal.So you were close to a car crash when it happened 5 weeks ago, and it's left you with tinnitus and muffled hearing in your right ear, as a result of the acoustic trauma?
Now you might get conflicting advice with regards to how you should handle this, so here's the way I'm going to put it:
What I would do in your situation, is as follows.
1) Limiting how much I left home by as much as is possible.
- Avoid further noise exposure by:
2) Wearing hearing protection for anything noisy that happens at home (ie. vacuuming or neighbour's DIY etc.).
3) Wearing hearing protection (preferably ear defenders or foam earplugs) whenever I left home.
1) N-Acetylcysteine (NAC) (1200mg daily)
- Take supplements:
2) Magnesium (266mg daily)
3) Zinc (10mg daily)
4) Vitamin E (1200iu daily)
5) Turmeric (1500mg daily)
6) Vitamin D3 (1000iu daily)
1) Playing video games I liked with low, or no sound (no sound for if they're noisy like FPS games for example) and no headset.
- Quiet activities that distract me:
2) Watching TV/Films/"Movies" I liked with subtitles and low, or no sound (no sound for in the case of sudden loud noises in Action Films for example).
3) Reading. Comic books or novels.
4) Spending time on forums or chat rooms (getting into heated arguments etc.).
And besides all that, just wait and pray for the best.
It may disappear completely, or it may disappear only partially. But what's for sure, is that over the course of the next year, providing you don't suffer any further noise traumas, it will get better.
When you say "long," you mean 5 weeks?Can't believe how long it takes to heal, life changing stuff.
Hey again @Bry.@Damocles, thanks for advice. I was wondering about the sensation of pressure/fullness in right ear, will that eventually subside?
I feel like there's a bubble in the ear if that makes any sense.
So after a standard assault on my ears, post-concert; 1 week was the average, until they would feel fully back to normal.@Damocles, thanks for replying, I really do appreciate it.
Through your experience, what was the longest you experienced those symptoms?
On this ▲. It's very unlikely, seeing as it followed a physical injury and/or noise trauma, that the muffled/congested feeling in your ear bears any relation to fluid trapped inside the middle-ear or a blocked Eustachian tube (these problems usually follow an infection or virus), so I doubt Sudafed or any other nasal decongestant is going to alleviate the sensation. But I don't see how trying one would cause any harm either, if you simply want to cover all bases.Thinking of trying Sudafed decongestant for that full/liquid in the ear feeling... A good idea?
Hey @Bry,@Damocles, I wasn't paying attention when creating this thread. It was supposed to say loud crashing sound, not car crash. I was standing next to machinery when the lid slammed shut.
So I've created this poll on your behalf (which you can now keep an eye on) for the purpose of collecting a greater number of answers from members of the forum, to the above question.Through your experience, what was the longest you experienced those symptoms?