- Mar 1, 2014
- 19
- Tinnitus Since
- New Year's Day 2014
- Cause of Tinnitus
- Meniere's Disease
Hello all,
Though I've never posted, I was a frequent visitor last year after I was diagnosed with Meniere's Disease. As a long term anxiety sufferer before this condition, I was completely devastated. I saw multiple ENTs, allergists, acupuncturists, psychdocs. and I lost 20 lbs in 6 weeks and had a 5 day period where I didn't sleep at all. As a result, I was put on a whirlwind of medication (including antidepressants/antipsychotics/etc.) and the more I read online, the more doctor's I saw, the hotter it got, the more stress I saw on my boyfriend's face, the further I sank. In July last year I tried to kill myself on a trip I planned specifically to do so. I was sure this condition was going to kill me slowly and I felt absolutely insane - I hated waking up, I could barely work, I was a zombie. I had divine intervention in the form of two hikers that interrupted me in the middle of the woods. I came back home disappointed and even more angry.
When I went back to my specialist, a test proved that my hearing has come back to normal in the affected (right) ear. Throughout the rest of the summer and early fall the T was still very bothersome. By this time I was down to one antidepressant and had discussed the July trip with my doctors. I felt like I was being responsible with these feelings, as opposed to isolating myself. Surprisingly through fall and winter I started to notice my T not bothering me as much. I actually started laughing and enjoying time with others as opposed to being consumed by the sounds and sensations. My fear of going to bed was no longer there, my excessive use of floor fans and white noise machines diminished and I felt I was on the path to habituation. I definitely knew I wasn't near there yet.
In late February I started experiencing severe chest pains after exertion and went to see my pdoc. She sent me for some tests, and longer story slightly shorter, I had some not-good results. Over the course of the next 6-8 weeks I was shuffled around cardiologists and such. At the age of 38, the previous 15 months had sucked. The buildup of all of this resulted in Klonopin (something I had experience with before) and took I it for about 6 weeks, twice daily - I knew it was too much. So I started a taper with my doc and now...
...this is where I'm at. After 6 months of slow but positive adjustments, I would argue that my T is worse than before. I moves around my head, the fans and white noise machines seem less effective and I'm a wreck. I feel immense guilt/regret/anger over having taken these benzos and now I'm in this looping train of thought, that irreparable damage has been done. I have had marginal knowledge of T and benzo issues, but the more I read now, the more concerned I grow. While I've been a wreck this past week, last night was the first night of zero sleep. I know that doesn't help. Previously the T was a somewhat consistent tone from the center of my head. Now it feels like its moving in my head and changes constantly in volume (like waves). Ugh.
Reading this all now, it seems like a lot. I hope people don't speak up because of this story and I would love to hear some encouragement and factual information on what I am experiencing. I need some support through what I hope is just another bump towards peace with T.
s
Though I've never posted, I was a frequent visitor last year after I was diagnosed with Meniere's Disease. As a long term anxiety sufferer before this condition, I was completely devastated. I saw multiple ENTs, allergists, acupuncturists, psychdocs. and I lost 20 lbs in 6 weeks and had a 5 day period where I didn't sleep at all. As a result, I was put on a whirlwind of medication (including antidepressants/antipsychotics/etc.) and the more I read online, the more doctor's I saw, the hotter it got, the more stress I saw on my boyfriend's face, the further I sank. In July last year I tried to kill myself on a trip I planned specifically to do so. I was sure this condition was going to kill me slowly and I felt absolutely insane - I hated waking up, I could barely work, I was a zombie. I had divine intervention in the form of two hikers that interrupted me in the middle of the woods. I came back home disappointed and even more angry.
When I went back to my specialist, a test proved that my hearing has come back to normal in the affected (right) ear. Throughout the rest of the summer and early fall the T was still very bothersome. By this time I was down to one antidepressant and had discussed the July trip with my doctors. I felt like I was being responsible with these feelings, as opposed to isolating myself. Surprisingly through fall and winter I started to notice my T not bothering me as much. I actually started laughing and enjoying time with others as opposed to being consumed by the sounds and sensations. My fear of going to bed was no longer there, my excessive use of floor fans and white noise machines diminished and I felt I was on the path to habituation. I definitely knew I wasn't near there yet.
In late February I started experiencing severe chest pains after exertion and went to see my pdoc. She sent me for some tests, and longer story slightly shorter, I had some not-good results. Over the course of the next 6-8 weeks I was shuffled around cardiologists and such. At the age of 38, the previous 15 months had sucked. The buildup of all of this resulted in Klonopin (something I had experience with before) and took I it for about 6 weeks, twice daily - I knew it was too much. So I started a taper with my doc and now...
...this is where I'm at. After 6 months of slow but positive adjustments, I would argue that my T is worse than before. I moves around my head, the fans and white noise machines seem less effective and I'm a wreck. I feel immense guilt/regret/anger over having taken these benzos and now I'm in this looping train of thought, that irreparable damage has been done. I have had marginal knowledge of T and benzo issues, but the more I read now, the more concerned I grow. While I've been a wreck this past week, last night was the first night of zero sleep. I know that doesn't help. Previously the T was a somewhat consistent tone from the center of my head. Now it feels like its moving in my head and changes constantly in volume (like waves). Ugh.
Reading this all now, it seems like a lot. I hope people don't speak up because of this story and I would love to hear some encouragement and factual information on what I am experiencing. I need some support through what I hope is just another bump towards peace with T.
s