Kendall
Member
- Jul 16, 2016
- 20
- Tinnitus Since
- 10/1994
- Cause of Tinnitus
- ear infections from congenital cholesteatoma
Have you read this yet? It's quite an interesting summary of T.Hi Dom. I'm not sure how well I am doing but things are improving! When I first had the sudden loss my hearing was 40db in the low freqs sloping to 70db in the highs. After all my treatment it improved and I was just left with a 40 do loss in the high frequencies on the left. Strangely I had the opposite problem to you early on where when my hearing dropped I could hardly hear my T! I have a theory about that but it's probably wrong!
I am curious. I sometimes have good parts of a day where I am pretty sure my tinnitus level is lower. So not habituation, but really a lower level of noise.I continue to improve slowly.
I developed a sudden hearing loss in my left ear 9 weeks ago. The working diagnosis is cochlear hydrops. I had oral and intratympanic steroids early and tried HBOT but it seemed to make things worse. The steroids definitely seemed to help my hearing which has thankfully improved. However the severe accompanying tinnitus has hit me like a freight train and is little better. I have had a great deal of support from my colleagues and family which has been great. I would be very happy to share my experiences. I am an ENT surgeon, in fact my area of expertise is Otology, so this is all a bit too close to home!
It seems to me that Gentamicin injections are sort of a one-way street (with a bolder at the end). Who's to say that your tinnitus won't get worse, even if it improves vertigo? And you will be deaf in the one ear, no doubt...I was offered gentamicin injections, I am thinking if vertigo continues I probably will do it!
did you have any vertigo?
What a great link, thank you!It took me several months to bring myself to read a book, but if you can, "When breath becomes air" helped me a lot. The author was a surgeon, about my age, who was diagnosed with terminal cancer. Made me realize that if other people can face much more aggressive conditions, I could live with T. Here's a link to a short article he wrote before the book:
http://stanmed.stanford.edu/2015spring/before-i-go.html
An interesting research but what is the difference between this articleamd what the Frequency Therapeutics are doing?It seems to me that Gentamicin injections are sort of a one-way street (with a bolder at the end). Who's to say that your tinnitus won't get worse, even if it improves vertigo? And you will be deaf in the one ear, no doubt...
I honestly think you should consider all other options before moving ahead with stuff that comes with no chance of going back again... Why not look into a bit of research on betahistine? The reason it doesn't seem to do much for inner ear disorders (vertigo, specifically) is because of the low bioavailability when taken orally. AM-125 aims to bypass that via the intranasal route. Maybe look into this to see if couldn't be of help...
What about cold laser therapy? Stem cell therapy? The field continues to see new developments all the time - here is an example...
I hope you find a way...
I visited three ENTs in my country and no one gave me steroids. That was not even a suggestion.... I visited my first ENT Just a day after my trauma and she sent me home and told me to see an audiologist.. I had to wait a month to see him... Anyways, even though I am young IT does not mean I don't have hearing issues( even though they are not obvious for now).... I was completely misdiagnosed by my doctors and no one told me my situation or even suggested any kind of treatment... And then I go online and see that People receive steroids injenctions for this.... And now I am with this forever...Hi @Dominic1955. No I never had vertigo, just the one episode of SSNHL. Gentamicin can be a great treatment but we are shifting more towards intratympanic steroids for Meniere's because of the risk of total hearing loss with the gentamicin injection.
How you managing the T? I'm fine at work but it irritates me when I am not very occupied.
Good luck Dom
The only thing the third ENT gave me was betahistine... I was taking it for Two and a half months and I though IT did not help but when I quit I started noticing constant ear fullness which I did not have while taking Betahistine... My conclusion is that IT helps me with ear fullness...Also there is a lot of recent evidence coming out that betahistine is not effective (no better than placebo) so we may well see its use in Meniere's drop dramatically.
I visited three ENTs in my country and no one gave me steroids. That was not even a suggestion.... I visited my first ENT Just a day after my trauma and she sent me home and told me to see an audiologist.. I had to wait a month to see him... Anyways, even though I am young IT does not mean I don't have hearing issues( even though they are not obvious for now).... I was completely misdiagnosed by my doctors and no one told me my situation or even suggested any kind of treatment... And then I go online and see that People receive steroids injenctions for this.... And now I am with this forever...