- Jun 26, 2020
- 129
- Tinnitus Since
- March 2020
- Cause of Tinnitus
- Bupropion nalextrone
@alepeno - how old are you may I ask? And did those meds include a number of SSRIs?Seeing this thread is making me so hopeful. I've been on antidepressants since I was around 14 and I've been through 15 different meds.
I'm so sorry. Your bio says tinnitus cause unknown? Run through the list of possibilities, it could be the meds. Some people take antidepressants for months or years before the tinnitus starts.Seeing this thread is making me so hopeful. I've been on antidepressants since I was around 14 and I've been through 15 different meds.
I got prescribed Wellbutrin because it might've had positive effects especially on libido. I've been taking it for a month and decided to stop. The tinnitus has gotten so bad it's unbearable. I haven't been off of meds in 5 years, I have no clue what my baseline is with my tinnitus.
Today is my first day off of Wellbutrin. Masking is really hard and I have to mask my tinnitus 24 hours a day with rain sounds, music, anything really. I'll try to keep updates weekly and see how I improve too. I'm also on Paroxetine, Trazodone and Lamotrigine.
Fingers crossed
Hi mate.13 Month Update - Good News!!!
- The volume of my tinnitus has reduced again. It bothers me less. If I turn up the TV, I don't hear it.
- Amazing / Grateful.
Hi mate, since my last post on NAC, I've not taken it. And the tinnitus continues to decrease in intensity and loudness about every 3-4 weeks. So in my view I wouldn't take the NAC. That's just me though. It's hard to advise, such little research.Hi mate.
I have had a little spike again where I hear it in my left ear more and I also hear a hissing sound.
So do you recommend taking NAC again?
Cheers.
Thanks mate. I'm starting to feel that it could play a big role psychologically. It probably works if you take it around the initial tinnitus onset. I'm glad to hear yours is getting better, that's awesome. My buzzing has decreased and it's more of a hissing sound now lol don't know what to expect next but seem like it's slowly getting better.Hi mate, since my last post on NAC, I've not taken it. And the tinnitus continues to decrease in intensity and loudness about every 3-4 weeks. So in my view I wouldn't take the NAC. That's just me though. It's hard to advise, such little research.
How are you doing 9 months in?Hi mate.
I have had a little spike again where I hear it in my left ear more and I also hear a hissing sound.
So do you recommend taking NAC again?
Cheers.
@alepeno, hey there friend. Made an account to reply to this post and let you know Lamotrigine can be ototoxic and I am 99% sure it is the cause of my own tinnitus, though it is very rare. Not saying it is a cause for you or that you should stop any meds without talking to your doctor. If you do discontinue Lamotrigine, it needs to be tapered because the sudden withdrawal can be hellish.Seeing this thread is making me so hopeful. I've been on antidepressants since I was around 14 and I've been through 15 different meds.
I got prescribed Wellbutrin because it might've had positive effects especially on libido. I've been taking it for a month and decided to stop. The tinnitus has gotten so bad it's unbearable. I haven't been off of meds in 5 years, I have no clue what my baseline is with my tinnitus.
Today is my first day off of Wellbutrin. Masking is really hard and I have to mask my tinnitus 24 hours a day with rain sounds, music, anything really. I'll try to keep updates weekly and see how I improve too. I'm also on Paroxetine, Trazodone and Lamotrigine.
Fingers crossed
I know I'm 20 days late, but I would just taper back down to your previous dose. I've seen some of the research on how increasing Serotonin can increase tinnitus and since Wellbutrin inhibits reuptake of serotonin and norepinephrine you'll most likely get a decrease in tinnitus symptoms if you simply remove some serotonin. I personally believe the trick with this is to very very slowly taper down. From reading posts on the forum, it seems like most people who post about having permanent tinnitus from SSRI's seem to have abruptly stopped taking their medication. I've tapered Tricyclics successfully and even though they are not in the same group as SRRI's they still limit serotonin reuptake.Hello, I just wanted to write here to say that I'm horrified about what I've read here. Because I just found out today that Bupropion might be the reason I have tinnitus.
To clarify, I've always had tinnitus, likely since my teens because I worked on a farm. But it was so quiet and unobtrusive that I never really paid it any mind and had long since become so accustomed to it, I didn't really ever notice it.
Flash forward about 28 years or so (I turn 39 this year), and my fiancé had finally convinced me to get on a antidepressant for my depression and anxiety. My doctor prescribed me Bupropion in August of 2020. I started off at 100 mg a day, though if I'm being truthful, I likely only took it five times a week, and slacked on the weekends.
On November 27th, I remember the day vividly. It was around 8 am, I was just waking up, only to realize that tinnitus that I had always had, and only truly noticed in utter and complete silence, was suddenly louder. I went to my ENT multiple times, only to be told that I had perfect hearing, but upon pressing them, I was tested for ranges not normally tested for, and there was a guess that I may perhaps had hearing loss in the upper range that I normally wouldn't hear anyways.
Eventually, I became used to it and life moved on. It was annoying but it wasn't ever anything more than that. Then I got the COVID-19 vaccine, and yes, after the second shot, I did notice that my tinnitus was a bit louder, but again, I was able to get accustomed to it. No, I don't regret getting the vaccine, as much as I hate tinnitus, I don't want to be responsible for passing the virus onto to someone else if I can help. Doing my part an all that. I'm also trained as an MLT so that was the other reason why.
Fast forward to last month. I was still pretty depressed and my doctor decided to up my dose from 100 mg a day to 300 mg a day. I will say after three weeks, I was feeling a lot better, much less depressed. But last week, my tinnitus go so much louder. Very louder.
It's gotten so bad that I had to leave work today to just come home and be miserable. After having a good cry, I started to research more, only to find this thread.
And so much of what I read here lines up with what I'm experiencing. Only to realize I have potentially an entire year to look forward to living with this until it's in a place where I can be tolerable again.
I'm talking to my doctor via telehealth on Thursday because I basically demanded I be taken off Bupropion and put on some other antidepressant that doesn't list tinnitus as a side effect? And if there isn't? I'll deal with it some other way. But I'm not taking this pill any longer than I have to. And I know I have to keep taking it because you have to wean yourself off it. Or other side effects can occur.
Thank you for letting me rant.
Hi.How are you doing 9 months in?
I took Pristiq and never knew it was ototoxic but now I have been suffering with tinnitus for 7 months. I only took it for month, and now I'm worried I have to suffer a constant high pitch ring in my brain for the rest of my life and I just can't do that. I am so depressed and my anxiety is terrible. I am so angry I took that drug.
Please tell me your tinnitus went away.
I had tinnitus for 2 or 3 days after a loud concert one time, and I knew my ears were extremely sensitive. I am struggling and in agony every second of the day. I want it to stop and I need it to stop for me to regain my desire to continue living. I had no idea that Pristiq was ototoxic, I still don't know what happened in my brain to cause this tinnitus. I pray every day that it goes away, but it seems to be permanent, I hate my life so fucking much, I wasn't happy before, and now I am in utter misery. I feel the hyper active auditory cells buzzing and burning everyday. It is exhausting and I don't want to kill myself, but I can not get peace of mind any more. I can not enjoy my life, and I want to actually kill myself, I have nothing to live for, and I don't even care how little and joyless my life has been so far, because my future is ruined with ringing and hissing, and the stories says it only gets worse. That drug severely damaged my brain.Hi.
I'm sorry to hear your experiencing this, tinnitus can definitely be daunting and especially if you haven't had it before.
My tinnitus has now come to a point where it's just a low hissing sound, I cannot notice it when the day gets busier, when outdoors and stuff. I only really have to pay attention to it at night. So I would say 90% better. I'm confident that it will eventually nearly subside. The most important thing is trying to have a positive mindset as stress and anxiety plays a big roll and correlates with tinnitus. I suffered anxiety and stress due to it but then took certain steps to snap myself out of it.
There is so much misinformation and negativity around it, but the reality is that over time tinnitus does get better.
Please feel free to reach out any time
@Uklawyer, it's hard to say. When I titled this thread I had NO IDEA how long this thing would stick around for and how many damn volume levels there are. If I had to put a number I'd say I'm at 25% now. It's so much easier to ignore.@T_Almost_Gone - what percentage reduction are you on now would you say?
OK, let me clarify. When I first posted and said 70% - ignore that. I was early in the journey and had less awareness.@T_Almost_Gone - I am about 1 year in from a worsening. I think it does trend in the right direction as you say. And better when your mind is occupied if in a quiet environment.
So you are down 75% overall and 5% more since you first started writing the thread (with the 70% title)?
Great news. So it's just a quiet hiss now?The volume of my tinnitus has reduced again. Now it sounds more like a hiss - much less tonal.
Yes, it's incredibly frustrating! Especially now with vaccinated people still catching and spreading Omicron. I think people with pre-existing medical conditions such as tinnitus, who have genuine fears about getting vaccinated, should be allowed to opt out of it.Honestly I don't know what to do about the COVID-19 vaccine. I'm avoiding travel - even though I'll soon need to for work and family. But so many countries require the vaccination. If the vaccination spikes my tinnitus - I will not be able to cope. I won't. Wondering if anyone else feels geographically trapped.