I had an acoustic trauma in Nov. 2017. I developed Morse code type tinnitus in my left ear and more of a hissing in my right. The tinnitus itself has gotten much better over the years. I really almost never think about it. I wake up a lot at night these days, and often I'm aware at some subliminal level that it's there (though certainly quieter than it once was), but I don't really notice it. We do sleep with a sound machine.
The one thing I would say, though, is that my ears remain very sensitive to tinny sound-- that is, most normal-volume sound coming from a TV or, say, a boombox. I find that those kinds of sounds really cause me ear pain and can even cause small, short-lived spikes. At the same time, occasionally being in a loud bar or a setting with much louder ambient sound does not cause these problems. For example, I was at a colleague's home for dinner last week. They had a boombox on quite low playing background music during dinner. After a certain amount of time, I finally had to ask them to turn it lower, even though it was already quite quiet and I knew they probably thought I was crazy. Anyway, this quiet boombox caused a significant short-lived spike where just the background music in the grocery store bothered my ears the next day, and my T ramped up briefly. Fortunately, it is already getting much better. By contrast, we went to New York for the holidays and were in all sorts of louder settings, and none of these problems occurred.
If quality of sound is a bigger issue than volume as such, what is the best course of treatment?
The one thing I would say, though, is that my ears remain very sensitive to tinny sound-- that is, most normal-volume sound coming from a TV or, say, a boombox. I find that those kinds of sounds really cause me ear pain and can even cause small, short-lived spikes. At the same time, occasionally being in a loud bar or a setting with much louder ambient sound does not cause these problems. For example, I was at a colleague's home for dinner last week. They had a boombox on quite low playing background music during dinner. After a certain amount of time, I finally had to ask them to turn it lower, even though it was already quite quiet and I knew they probably thought I was crazy. Anyway, this quiet boombox caused a significant short-lived spike where just the background music in the grocery store bothered my ears the next day, and my T ramped up briefly. Fortunately, it is already getting much better. By contrast, we went to New York for the holidays and were in all sorts of louder settings, and none of these problems occurred.
If quality of sound is a bigger issue than volume as such, what is the best course of treatment?