- Apr 19, 2021
- 63
- Tinnitus Since
- 04/2021
- Cause of Tinnitus
- Acoustic Trauma/Microsuction/Irrigation
I'm only referring to the initial 2-4 weeks when a person first encounters tinnitus, not people months or years later who either only have ringing, or have a wide range of different sounds. But of those who go to a concert and get ringing for only 48 hours and it goes away, none of them ever seem to get hissing or other sounds, am I right?
So this must mean that once the initial ringing changes after week 1, week 2, or week 3 for SOME people in the early stages, something fundamentally has changed in their brain or body that may indicate a more chronic expectation. I've known people who have had ringing for weeks after a medication or a concert and it goes away after 2-3 weeks. But would it have gone away so quickly if they had reported a hiss or other sound at that time?
Is this a question maybe researchers should be asking? I see a lot of people trying to make sense of their noises once it's already become chronic, and heard some people say "well it changes to a hiss as it's getting better." I'm not referring to that scenario, where someone's hiss comes on 6 months later. I mean just in the early stages.
Because mine started out as a ringing for the first few days, then changed to a hiss, and I wonder if this was a "point of no return" where I should have just accepted that it wouldn't be going away in 2-3 weeks like my ENTs said. I know there's no exact science to anything, but maybe this one thing is an indicator that something, such as a noise-induced trauma, has now become a brain problem and not just an auditory problem when it happens quickly after an incident.
Any thoughts on this? A way of gauging if someone is more likely to be a long-term (months or years) case?
So this must mean that once the initial ringing changes after week 1, week 2, or week 3 for SOME people in the early stages, something fundamentally has changed in their brain or body that may indicate a more chronic expectation. I've known people who have had ringing for weeks after a medication or a concert and it goes away after 2-3 weeks. But would it have gone away so quickly if they had reported a hiss or other sound at that time?
Is this a question maybe researchers should be asking? I see a lot of people trying to make sense of their noises once it's already become chronic, and heard some people say "well it changes to a hiss as it's getting better." I'm not referring to that scenario, where someone's hiss comes on 6 months later. I mean just in the early stages.
Because mine started out as a ringing for the first few days, then changed to a hiss, and I wonder if this was a "point of no return" where I should have just accepted that it wouldn't be going away in 2-3 weeks like my ENTs said. I know there's no exact science to anything, but maybe this one thing is an indicator that something, such as a noise-induced trauma, has now become a brain problem and not just an auditory problem when it happens quickly after an incident.
Any thoughts on this? A way of gauging if someone is more likely to be a long-term (months or years) case?
Member
I just looked in your posts and read your story. I'm glad you've taken charge of your life and found ways to do the things you want to do despite having the tumor.