Early December last year, I went to an ENT because of a suspected ear infection, and, as an afterthought, asked about my tinnitus having become a tad louder than it was usually.
The ENT had a casual look into my ear and decreed that the tinnitus must be caused by ear wax which she was going to clean out. "There! Better now?"
Nope. I didn't perceive anything remarkable, one way or another. I also don't remember the procedure being shockingly loud.
However, a couple days later I woke up from a loud noise in both ears, the noise being entirely dissimilar to the tinnitus I already had and knew for years.
I didn't link this deterioration to the microsuction procedure because, like I said, I didn't notice anything remarkable at the time. Certainly not a noise level that would suggest acoustic trauma.
Then again, I just read @OptimusPrimed's thread about re-developing a nasty tinnitus after shooting with hearing protection, and apparently @OptimusPrimed didn't perceive the shooting noise as traumatizing either, originally.
Additionally, I would find it conceivable that I simply didn't register the acoustic trauma that happened since I have age-related hearing loss already, so I wouldn't hear everything nasty that's going on under any circumstances.
So I'm left to wonder whether the microsuction procedure could be at the root of the tinnitus that has been ruining most of my days for several months now, even though it didn't strike me as the obvious reason at the time?
The ENT had a casual look into my ear and decreed that the tinnitus must be caused by ear wax which she was going to clean out. "There! Better now?"
Nope. I didn't perceive anything remarkable, one way or another. I also don't remember the procedure being shockingly loud.
However, a couple days later I woke up from a loud noise in both ears, the noise being entirely dissimilar to the tinnitus I already had and knew for years.
I didn't link this deterioration to the microsuction procedure because, like I said, I didn't notice anything remarkable at the time. Certainly not a noise level that would suggest acoustic trauma.
Then again, I just read @OptimusPrimed's thread about re-developing a nasty tinnitus after shooting with hearing protection, and apparently @OptimusPrimed didn't perceive the shooting noise as traumatizing either, originally.
Additionally, I would find it conceivable that I simply didn't register the acoustic trauma that happened since I have age-related hearing loss already, so I wouldn't hear everything nasty that's going on under any circumstances.
So I'm left to wonder whether the microsuction procedure could be at the root of the tinnitus that has been ruining most of my days for several months now, even though it didn't strike me as the obvious reason at the time?