- May 27, 2020
- 556
- Tinnitus Since
- 2007
- Cause of Tinnitus
- Loud music/headphones/concerts - Hyperacusis from motorbike
When I first got hyperacusis, I had very bad symptoms in both ears and I would describe the pain levels and LDLs to be identical (terrible) for both ears.
Some 8 months down the line and my symptoms have improved overall, but not in the way I expected. Usually one ear, for example the right ear, becomes more sensitive and painful than the left ear, while the left ear seems to recover from the condition almost entirely - almost has if every step of improvement in one ear is offset by a step of deterioration in the other. This also goes for the trigeminal neuralgia, with the aching jaw/facial pain - the pain is only ever on the one side. Then a few days later, my ears will "flip", almost at random, whereby the left ear becomes the extremely sensitive one and now my left side has extremely bad trigeminal neuralgia while the right side seems to be completely ok. This has been going on for a few months now and the sensitivity and pain over this last week has been the worst it's been in months. This has made me question everything we know about this condition.
Has anyone else experienced something similar? How on earth does this behaviour fit in with any of the current theories/models, such as the type II afferent sensitisation route?
For what it's worth, my hyperacusis came on immediately after a noise trauma from a backfiring motorbike. I have a history of noise exposure, tinnitus and TMJ disorder prior to this event, and had noticed some prior sensitivity building up before this event happened for a good year or so but nothing debilitating. It also happened during an extremely stressful time of my life. Could there be something else going on that I haven't considered?
I would be interested to hear if anyone else has experienced something similar or has an idea as to what might be going on here.
Some 8 months down the line and my symptoms have improved overall, but not in the way I expected. Usually one ear, for example the right ear, becomes more sensitive and painful than the left ear, while the left ear seems to recover from the condition almost entirely - almost has if every step of improvement in one ear is offset by a step of deterioration in the other. This also goes for the trigeminal neuralgia, with the aching jaw/facial pain - the pain is only ever on the one side. Then a few days later, my ears will "flip", almost at random, whereby the left ear becomes the extremely sensitive one and now my left side has extremely bad trigeminal neuralgia while the right side seems to be completely ok. This has been going on for a few months now and the sensitivity and pain over this last week has been the worst it's been in months. This has made me question everything we know about this condition.
Has anyone else experienced something similar? How on earth does this behaviour fit in with any of the current theories/models, such as the type II afferent sensitisation route?
For what it's worth, my hyperacusis came on immediately after a noise trauma from a backfiring motorbike. I have a history of noise exposure, tinnitus and TMJ disorder prior to this event, and had noticed some prior sensitivity building up before this event happened for a good year or so but nothing debilitating. It also happened during an extremely stressful time of my life. Could there be something else going on that I haven't considered?
I would be interested to hear if anyone else has experienced something similar or has an idea as to what might be going on here.