Hi Folks,
I just joined this group. I am a 67 year old male of Asian descent. My T started on Jan 1, 2014. It sounds like crickets chirping (around 4.5 KHz) in back of my head. I had a bad cold in late December, and went to the family physician after T started. He found lot of wax build up in on ear, cleaned it out, but T stayed. I went and saw two ENT's and their audiologists. I have moderate to severe symmetrical hearing loss in 4 KHz to 8 KHz range, attributed to aging. One of the ENT's thought that my brain is making up the T sound because it tries to listen to +4 KHz sounds, but cannot hear it. Like someone having phantom pain from a limb that has been amputated. I never was exposed to loud noises like gun fires or listening to loud music thru ear buds (too old for iPods). My T fluctuates. Some days it is very loud, then starts tapering off for couple of days, and I will have quiet or very light T for couple of days, and then it spikes up again. And the cycle repeats. I am coping with T using Valium and Xanax. My biggest annoyance is that T goes up when watching TV, or listening to music. And this is how I had planned to spend my time in retirement!
On July 5, I was having zero T day, and went to a baseball game. The stadium was loud, had no ear plugs, and my T spiked and has been staying loud. I hope it comes down.
Can anyone shed light on fluctuating T, watching TV etc? I tried to relate it to my blood pressure, diet, alcohol etc, but have found no correlation. Thanks.
NiruD
I just joined this group. I am a 67 year old male of Asian descent. My T started on Jan 1, 2014. It sounds like crickets chirping (around 4.5 KHz) in back of my head. I had a bad cold in late December, and went to the family physician after T started. He found lot of wax build up in on ear, cleaned it out, but T stayed. I went and saw two ENT's and their audiologists. I have moderate to severe symmetrical hearing loss in 4 KHz to 8 KHz range, attributed to aging. One of the ENT's thought that my brain is making up the T sound because it tries to listen to +4 KHz sounds, but cannot hear it. Like someone having phantom pain from a limb that has been amputated. I never was exposed to loud noises like gun fires or listening to loud music thru ear buds (too old for iPods). My T fluctuates. Some days it is very loud, then starts tapering off for couple of days, and I will have quiet or very light T for couple of days, and then it spikes up again. And the cycle repeats. I am coping with T using Valium and Xanax. My biggest annoyance is that T goes up when watching TV, or listening to music. And this is how I had planned to spend my time in retirement!
On July 5, I was having zero T day, and went to a baseball game. The stadium was loud, had no ear plugs, and my T spiked and has been staying loud. I hope it comes down.
Can anyone shed light on fluctuating T, watching TV etc? I tried to relate it to my blood pressure, diet, alcohol etc, but have found no correlation. Thanks.
NiruD