Hi there!
So I have noise-induced tinnitus. Just came home from the park where I played boule with my son. At a certain point a heavy metal lid on a box where they keep the balls slammed close to my ear (1 meter). I could immediately hear my high-pitched tinnitus sound go up for a fraction of a second. Since there were other sounds in the park it was hard to know if the higher pitch stayed.
Now I'm back home and I feel that the tinnitus in the left ear is higher. The sound level of the slamming lid was between 90 and 95 decibels. I have had some other accidents like this which never gave me a permanent higher tone, but this time I actually noticed the high-pitched tinnitus go up when I heard the slam.
I don't have access to Prednisone. I just want to know if you think there's a risk I got an acoustic trauma and that this louder level will remain permanently? Or maybe it is just a "fear-spike"?
I've had other noise accidents like this with louder sounds, like dropping cutlery in the kitchen which can peak at over 100 decibels. I wonder if the sound energy of the heavy metal lid slamming can do more damage than knife dropping on a plate etc?
EDIT:
Now I'm back home and I feel that the tinnitus in the left ear is louder. The sound level of the slamming lid was between 90 and 95 decibels.
It may have been louder, up to 98 decibel maybe.
So I have noise-induced tinnitus. Just came home from the park where I played boule with my son. At a certain point a heavy metal lid on a box where they keep the balls slammed close to my ear (1 meter). I could immediately hear my high-pitched tinnitus sound go up for a fraction of a second. Since there were other sounds in the park it was hard to know if the higher pitch stayed.
Now I'm back home and I feel that the tinnitus in the left ear is higher. The sound level of the slamming lid was between 90 and 95 decibels. I have had some other accidents like this which never gave me a permanent higher tone, but this time I actually noticed the high-pitched tinnitus go up when I heard the slam.
I don't have access to Prednisone. I just want to know if you think there's a risk I got an acoustic trauma and that this louder level will remain permanently? Or maybe it is just a "fear-spike"?
I've had other noise accidents like this with louder sounds, like dropping cutlery in the kitchen which can peak at over 100 decibels. I wonder if the sound energy of the heavy metal lid slamming can do more damage than knife dropping on a plate etc?
EDIT:
Now I'm back home and I feel that the tinnitus in the left ear is louder. The sound level of the slamming lid was between 90 and 95 decibels.
It may have been louder, up to 98 decibel maybe.