My journey began last weekend when I fell asleep with a headphone in my right ear. I had turned off my music & subconsciously set my alarm to max volume as I do every night, forgetting I still had a headphone in. In my dream I recall hearing a terrifyingly loud high pitched noise, only to be stuck in sleep paralysis and could only move about 30 seconds - 1 minute later to rip the headphone out. At that point the damage was done.
I immediately had SSHL and could only hear things at about half volume for the remainder of the day along with fullness, high pitched sound sensitivity, reactive tinnitus, and dysacusis. This was not my first rodeo with tinnitus, as I have previously had a mild case of it for the last 5-10 years or so. However, I now have multiple tones of it. Scared that my eardrum had been damaged, I went to urgent care who said there was too much wax to see the eardrum and had it removed. This was extremely painful and made the sensitivity 100x worse afterwards. Later that day I realized that sounds had an additional 'ring' to them like the A/C or fans. I also was terrified that even the sound of a plate clanking in the kitchen seemed to be amplified 3 fold. Panicking, I googled to see what I had and hyperacusis was what came up. In the next few days I protected the ear whenever I would encounter an uncomfortable noise. What I didn't realize though, was how severe this would get.
The very next day I went to the gym and brought my earplugs, and after a few minutes I realized that I had to put one in. Another oddity that I noticed was that my headphone in the left ear sounded a bit off. Throughout the next few days I kept protecting my right ear, only to realize that my left started to become affected. Confused and scared, I scheduled an appointment with an audiologist and ENT. They told me that I had slight high frequency hearing loss, but everything was still in the normal range. At this point about 5 days later my right ear was in constant pain for seemingly no reason. They diagnosed me with acoustic trauma along with hyperacusis and I implored the ENT about a steroid treatment since it was still a few days after the incident, but they said no.
Now I am here around a week later and am seeking some guidance. I feel that my sound tolerance is decreasing by the day, despite avoiding what I believe is any volume level that could hurt my ears. 2 nights ago I was watching TV at normal volume with my spouse with the right ear plugged, and today I felt like even with both ears plugged that it was too much. I do not have any reactive pain from sound, but it is feeling increasingly uncomfortable. The medical professionals told me only to plug up when the noise would be harmful and since that advice I've been overly cautious and felt like it's been counterproductive. Should I be letting the good ear breathe to prevent this? Is discomfort (not fullness) a reason to plug up?
I immediately had SSHL and could only hear things at about half volume for the remainder of the day along with fullness, high pitched sound sensitivity, reactive tinnitus, and dysacusis. This was not my first rodeo with tinnitus, as I have previously had a mild case of it for the last 5-10 years or so. However, I now have multiple tones of it. Scared that my eardrum had been damaged, I went to urgent care who said there was too much wax to see the eardrum and had it removed. This was extremely painful and made the sensitivity 100x worse afterwards. Later that day I realized that sounds had an additional 'ring' to them like the A/C or fans. I also was terrified that even the sound of a plate clanking in the kitchen seemed to be amplified 3 fold. Panicking, I googled to see what I had and hyperacusis was what came up. In the next few days I protected the ear whenever I would encounter an uncomfortable noise. What I didn't realize though, was how severe this would get.
The very next day I went to the gym and brought my earplugs, and after a few minutes I realized that I had to put one in. Another oddity that I noticed was that my headphone in the left ear sounded a bit off. Throughout the next few days I kept protecting my right ear, only to realize that my left started to become affected. Confused and scared, I scheduled an appointment with an audiologist and ENT. They told me that I had slight high frequency hearing loss, but everything was still in the normal range. At this point about 5 days later my right ear was in constant pain for seemingly no reason. They diagnosed me with acoustic trauma along with hyperacusis and I implored the ENT about a steroid treatment since it was still a few days after the incident, but they said no.
Now I am here around a week later and am seeking some guidance. I feel that my sound tolerance is decreasing by the day, despite avoiding what I believe is any volume level that could hurt my ears. 2 nights ago I was watching TV at normal volume with my spouse with the right ear plugged, and today I felt like even with both ears plugged that it was too much. I do not have any reactive pain from sound, but it is feeling increasingly uncomfortable. The medical professionals told me only to plug up when the noise would be harmful and since that advice I've been overly cautious and felt like it's been counterproductive. Should I be letting the good ear breathe to prevent this? Is discomfort (not fullness) a reason to plug up?