- Apr 2, 2022
- 21
- Tinnitus Since
- 1986
- Cause of Tinnitus
- One single Gunshot from large caliber handgun
After a 15-year period of complete habituation to my left ear tinnitus (caused by a one time gun shot noise exposure when I was 26), my tinnitus has returned to my left ear. I'm a singer/songwriter and do a lot of home recording, sometimes having to use headphones to record vocals so there is no bleed over. I have tried to keep the volume relatively low but apparently it wasn't low enough as the tinnitus in that ear is back and it's worse than 10 years ago...
I also play a weekly solo gig playing acoustic guitar and singing through a small PA. Before this recent tinnitus flare up - it was never a problem to play my gig and I didn't use my musician earplugs as the volume on the stage where I sit behind the speakers was only around 80 to 84 dB at the peaks. I've been playing in duos, trios and solo (never drums) for 10 years without any problems. Since the tinnitus returned, I've been playing with a -29 dB filter in my Westone earplug in my left ear but it still seems to aggravate the tinnitus.
While the sound level is only 80 dB where I am behind my PA, I used a dB meter to measure the sound level of my voice when singing some of the higher pitched songs. I held my dB meter up to my left ear when singing the high notes of some more challenging songs and discovered there were some peaks as high as 90 dB.
My question is: even using -29 dB filters, can singing create enough internal vibration and resonance in the ear to further damage hair cells even if no ambient sound in coming in directly through the ear?
Thanks for any advise or info!
Karl
I also play a weekly solo gig playing acoustic guitar and singing through a small PA. Before this recent tinnitus flare up - it was never a problem to play my gig and I didn't use my musician earplugs as the volume on the stage where I sit behind the speakers was only around 80 to 84 dB at the peaks. I've been playing in duos, trios and solo (never drums) for 10 years without any problems. Since the tinnitus returned, I've been playing with a -29 dB filter in my Westone earplug in my left ear but it still seems to aggravate the tinnitus.
While the sound level is only 80 dB where I am behind my PA, I used a dB meter to measure the sound level of my voice when singing some of the higher pitched songs. I held my dB meter up to my left ear when singing the high notes of some more challenging songs and discovered there were some peaks as high as 90 dB.
My question is: even using -29 dB filters, can singing create enough internal vibration and resonance in the ear to further damage hair cells even if no ambient sound in coming in directly through the ear?
Thanks for any advise or info!
Karl