Hi Everyone,
I am new here. I've been reading through lots of posts and there seems to be a wealth of knowledge amongst the members, so I was hoping you could help educate me.
Up until about 3 months ago, I've had very mild tinnitus for as long as I can remember. I experienced it as a very high pitched and constant ringing in both ears that I mainly only heard in complete silence. It never bothered me and was completely used to it. 3 months ago though, I noticed one night in bed as I was lying on my left ear, that the sound was much increased and had changed a bit. The constant ringing is still there, but louder, and there's also this oscillating, non-rhythmic lower pitch ring as well. It's only in my left ear and the volume increases substantially when I bend-over, yawn, or press on the left ear.
Can anyone explain the mechanism of why those actions would increase the volume and if that might point to a particular cause?
I am a 40-year-old male, have no history of trauma or other related medical conditions, and have not been to a doctor yet.
Thanks!
I am new here. I've been reading through lots of posts and there seems to be a wealth of knowledge amongst the members, so I was hoping you could help educate me.
Up until about 3 months ago, I've had very mild tinnitus for as long as I can remember. I experienced it as a very high pitched and constant ringing in both ears that I mainly only heard in complete silence. It never bothered me and was completely used to it. 3 months ago though, I noticed one night in bed as I was lying on my left ear, that the sound was much increased and had changed a bit. The constant ringing is still there, but louder, and there's also this oscillating, non-rhythmic lower pitch ring as well. It's only in my left ear and the volume increases substantially when I bend-over, yawn, or press on the left ear.
Can anyone explain the mechanism of why those actions would increase the volume and if that might point to a particular cause?
I am a 40-year-old male, have no history of trauma or other related medical conditions, and have not been to a doctor yet.
Thanks!