Advice on Flying

Forever hopeful

Member
Author
Sep 5, 2015
718
USA
Tinnitus Since
2015 resolved, 4/20 L ear, increase 2/21
Cause of Tinnitus
2015,noise,2020-21 SNHL
Hi,

I have to fly next week. Five hour flights each way Monday to Thursday for work. I am an anxious mess. I love to travel and now am paralyzed with fear. I have not flown since T. I know many folks with T in my own life who fly often and have no problem. My audiologist and ENT said it was fine an it would not cause any harm. My ENT has T also. Audiologist said many with T enjoy the hum of the plane as it masks their T. I have ETD so my ENT gave me affrin as an immediate decongestant and recommended "airplanes " to help with the pressure on take off and during descent.

What I am worried about is the noise level. I have been advised not to wear earplugs as someone I know actually got T b/c their ears could not de-pressurize. I am currently coming off of a spike due to some moderate noise exposure and also increased pressure in head due to ETD and a touch of a cold.

So I am paranoid. I have read about many of you flying. Any feedback would be great.


Thanks
 
Thanks. I will be getting the plugs knows as " Earplanes" that are supposed to address the pressure issue. They sell them right at the local pharmacy.

Danielle
 
You'll be fine with the decongestants , and for the noise I used a noise cancelling headphones with low music volume the whole flight and when the pilot announces descent I remove them just until we're close to the ground other wise you'll be fine :) (my flight was 9 hours ) if you don't have headphones u can use ear plugs while cruising just not on descent
 
You'll be fine... I've done two trips to Vietnam in the last 4 months and was in transit both times for a total of 96 hours.

Noise cancelling head phones work well.

However, I WOULD cancel the trip if I had a head cold.
 
I had the same fear the first time I flew with T but now I like it because I always sit right over/near engine and if I am lucky it does mask my T. I love when that happens!
 
I think it's different for everyone. I tried earplane plugs and had to take them out, found them uncomfortable. Regular foam plugs work for me but I've found it best to fly open-eared, no plugs at all. I just don't watch movies anymore - read or take some melatonin and sleep. But it all depends on your T, your other health factors, and how more or less you've habituated.
 
Planes are fine, the noise level is far from harmful and some of the newer commercial aircraft are spookily quiet. I've been on many intercontinental flights over the last 10 years and only one has given me any trouble with ear pressure.
 

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