Hey all,
New here. Good to meet folk!
I first started noticing an intermittent low-pitched rumble in my left ear about 4 years ago - sounded like a car idling outside the house. Over the last couple years it has got louder and less intermittent, more a constant sound, sometimes louder, sometimes quieter, very occasionally non-existent.
When my daughter was born a couple of years ago I noticed that her cries would trigger a kind of "squelch" feeling in that left ear. I can often reproduce this sensation by clicking my fingers next to my left ear. Funnily enough, a quick Valsalva stops this from happening making me wonder if I have some long-standing eustachian tube issue.
I'm lucky in that this doesn't stop me from sleeping (almost nothing does!) and, in fact, often when lying down at night the rumble is at its quietest (and sometimes absent).
Anyway, that's me 43 years old and looking for inspiration from other folks' experience. Planning to get myself back to the GP as soon as COVID-19 permits and get another referral to the ENT (last experience post-MRI was a classic: "there's nothing wrong that we can see, you're just going to have to live with it").
All the best!
Simon
New here. Good to meet folk!
I first started noticing an intermittent low-pitched rumble in my left ear about 4 years ago - sounded like a car idling outside the house. Over the last couple years it has got louder and less intermittent, more a constant sound, sometimes louder, sometimes quieter, very occasionally non-existent.
When my daughter was born a couple of years ago I noticed that her cries would trigger a kind of "squelch" feeling in that left ear. I can often reproduce this sensation by clicking my fingers next to my left ear. Funnily enough, a quick Valsalva stops this from happening making me wonder if I have some long-standing eustachian tube issue.
I'm lucky in that this doesn't stop me from sleeping (almost nothing does!) and, in fact, often when lying down at night the rumble is at its quietest (and sometimes absent).
Anyway, that's me 43 years old and looking for inspiration from other folks' experience. Planning to get myself back to the GP as soon as COVID-19 permits and get another referral to the ENT (last experience post-MRI was a classic: "there's nothing wrong that we can see, you're just going to have to live with it").
All the best!
Simon