- Jul 25, 2022
- 4
- Tinnitus Since
- 2022
- Cause of Tinnitus
- High frequency hearing loss, potentially from COVID
These are obviously quite sweeping superlatives and not comforting at all for many to read. The general sentiment seems to be that tinnitus from any degree of hearing loss is capital P, Permanent. While that is demonstrably the reality for many of people on forums reporting 10, 20, 40+ years, and my sincere condolences to you, are they an extreme group?
Just because there's no magic bullet or lever to pull for a lot of people, is it really outside of the realm of possibility to hope that tinnitus doesn't get somewhat better for people with hearing loss, and forums make up a vocal (but quite large) minority? Does that really mean it won't naturally fade away as our brain plasticity realised it's not a productive signal or whatever, even to much milder levels? Are our damaged hearing cells really doomed to perpetually transmit a shrill, phantom sound until our last breath? Plenty of people with hearing loss don't have tinnitus, so we know the brain is capable of one without the other.
I'm sorry if this comes off as insensitive or dismissive to the debilitating cases or anyone whose been in the trenches of this for a while -- if it helps, I'm going on 8 years now with Visual Snow Syndrome -- I guess I'm reaching out for support or insight and venting.
Can we draw anecdotally from people outside of the forum bubble, family, friends, doctors, audiologists etc.?
My story, It appears as if COVID-19 took out some of the higher frequencies from my right ear, and I have mild to moderate tinnitus for the past 3 or so months -- slow onset until I realised "Hmmm I can hear this over my Podcast now, wait now my fan can't mask anything and I'm panicking... Wait I hate sitting in this internal meeting room at work". I don't think there's any noise trauma and it's unilateral, I can't really detect the actual loss day to day. Knock on wood. 24M.
My Audiologist - not sure if he was trying to be comforting - did say he's seen people with my level of hearing loss, not prompted by industrial or military noise, have their tinnitus subside. I know It's not productive to measure success by how much you can technically hear it at any one time but more regulating your reaction to it, but in a blue sky clinging to hope kind of way, It's sure nice to daydream about isn't it?
Relevant backstory: I've had Visual Snow since 2014 and know that you can habituate to annoying sensory neurological medical mysteries that essentially no-one in your life can relate to, as dreadful and isolating as the thought seems in the initial months. Don't get me wrong, I still wish it wasn't my reality most days. I'm in that early stage again - never thought I would be again - and haaaating it.
(I already had super mild, low tinnitus from visual snow that could be masked by pretty much any external sound, I just slept with a fan on. I don't expect that to go, the sounds have stacked -- presumably with a different genesis each. This hiss/ring is a different beast.)
Just because there's no magic bullet or lever to pull for a lot of people, is it really outside of the realm of possibility to hope that tinnitus doesn't get somewhat better for people with hearing loss, and forums make up a vocal (but quite large) minority? Does that really mean it won't naturally fade away as our brain plasticity realised it's not a productive signal or whatever, even to much milder levels? Are our damaged hearing cells really doomed to perpetually transmit a shrill, phantom sound until our last breath? Plenty of people with hearing loss don't have tinnitus, so we know the brain is capable of one without the other.
I'm sorry if this comes off as insensitive or dismissive to the debilitating cases or anyone whose been in the trenches of this for a while -- if it helps, I'm going on 8 years now with Visual Snow Syndrome -- I guess I'm reaching out for support or insight and venting.
Can we draw anecdotally from people outside of the forum bubble, family, friends, doctors, audiologists etc.?
My story, It appears as if COVID-19 took out some of the higher frequencies from my right ear, and I have mild to moderate tinnitus for the past 3 or so months -- slow onset until I realised "Hmmm I can hear this over my Podcast now, wait now my fan can't mask anything and I'm panicking... Wait I hate sitting in this internal meeting room at work". I don't think there's any noise trauma and it's unilateral, I can't really detect the actual loss day to day. Knock on wood. 24M.
My Audiologist - not sure if he was trying to be comforting - did say he's seen people with my level of hearing loss, not prompted by industrial or military noise, have their tinnitus subside. I know It's not productive to measure success by how much you can technically hear it at any one time but more regulating your reaction to it, but in a blue sky clinging to hope kind of way, It's sure nice to daydream about isn't it?
Relevant backstory: I've had Visual Snow since 2014 and know that you can habituate to annoying sensory neurological medical mysteries that essentially no-one in your life can relate to, as dreadful and isolating as the thought seems in the initial months. Don't get me wrong, I still wish it wasn't my reality most days. I'm in that early stage again - never thought I would be again - and haaaating it.
(I already had super mild, low tinnitus from visual snow that could be masked by pretty much any external sound, I just slept with a fan on. I don't expect that to go, the sounds have stacked -- presumably with a different genesis each. This hiss/ring is a different beast.)