Sorry for the delayed response, but to be honest, things haven't been going quite so well for me since my last post. I may have been too quick to my judgement on the success of the surgery and need to give it much more time. I have had a bit of setback from trying to push my noise exposure too much and much of my original noxacusis pain has returned. I am marginally better than before surgery and I am still hopeful I will continue to recover. From reading more into it this, it can take many months, and it's still been only a couple of weeks for me so I don't need to panic just yet. I will try to give updates going forward every 2 weeks to track progress. In answer to your questions:This is really great news. I am absolutely ecstatic for both you and the community as a whole.
Professor Bance recommended a similar procedure to me last year, but I was hesitant as I had not heard of anyone receiving a tympanic neurectomy.
Some more questions:
1) How long did you have to stay in hospital? Overnight?
2) Were you given any pain meds which might be contributing to current symptom reduction?
3) You mentioned 'the surgeon'. Did Professor Bance carry out this procedure himself? Or was he managing/consulting on this?
4) I'm assuming you had this procedure done in Cambridge?
5) Did Professor Bance mention anything about possible revision surgery? In the literature, revision is often needed for tympanic neurectomy.
6) Your noxacusis pain, did you get nerve pain along the jaw area, as well as a deep pain in the ear? How about random tingling feelings around the ear?
7) Did you have loudness hyperacusis?
Please can you give us regular updates? Particularly after you remove the ear padding, and after around a month or so once the surgical pain disappears?
Thanks.
Are you saying your hyperacusis went away after the surgery? Did you have loudness hyperacusis, pain byperacusis or both?
1) I had to be there at 7 am and left about 5 pm.
2) I was given codeine. Some of my initial early success, looking at it now, may have been contributed to placebo, Diazepam (I took 35 mg over two days to handle the travelling and pre-op anxiety), the anaesthetic (because I woke up feeling great) and the follow-up codeine I was given (a regular 60 mg dose for 5 days.)
3) Yeah, Professor Bance did this himself.
4) Yeah, in Cambridge.
5) No, but I have a face-to-face follow-up appointment on the 18th of December. He has lasered my ear to prevent anything from regrowing.
6) Yeah, jaw pain and deep ear pain, not any ear tingling.
7) Some loudness hyperacusis, but not severe.
As I say, I have slipped backwards now pretty much to where I was, so obviously the past week and a bit has been quite a disappointment for me and tough to deal with mentally. This is because I was so excited straight after the surgery as my pain and sound tolerance had apparently significantly improved. However, I always told myself before surgery that it was unrealistic to expect any initial success and that it was more a procedure that would allow me to improve naturally more easily. In the tympanic neurectomy study it was an average of 2.1 months for people's pain to resolve, with some taking 5 months, so I still got plenty of time.
There appears to have been no negative side effects as of yet, my tinnitus is unchanged, if anything, still quieter. I do have a bit more ETD at the moment with some ear popping but this is normal after any ear surgery. It should still settle.