I have had tinnitus and what I assume is hyperacusis (ear pain/ear drums seem to convulse at certain sounds) for 5 years now, and while the first year was a rollercoaster of ups and downs, anxiety, fear, depression, ENTs, audiologists, etc., I've gotten to habituate and usually it doesn't bother me anymore. It likely occurred from noise exposure (played in bands/target shooting/hunting) but my hearing from the audiologists was found to be within the normal range. I rarely notice it most days. Except for when a spike occurs out of nowhere and my hearing in the affected ear seems to muffle and feel full. Also, sounds out of the affected ear seem much less clear. I close off the affected ear and tap my nails on a surface and it sounds like a "tap". I close the relatively good ear, where the tinnitus initially originated from, and leave the affected ear open and the sound is a "thud". So there's a definite loss of clarity. This has also caused a new sense of sound sensitivity where noises like a faucet running or certain fans blowing can exacerbate the tinnitus. It can get pretty scary as it is disorientating.
But often the sensation subsides after a number of hours, sometimes even minutes, or with sleep and then the ringing returns to my baseline volume, along with the ear fullness dissipating and all seems well enough again. Well, today I'm sitting here in the early evening having had a spike in the middle of the previous night that awoke me from my sleep, which I didn't let bother me too much and promptly fell back asleep. However upon waking, there's the damn "full ear" sensation and sound sensitivity again. But now, it's been over 8 hours and there's been no change.
I'm having to sit in a quiet room away from family and noise, because noise has become largely uncomfortable and causes my hearing to dampen and the tinnitus to spike in response. It's worrisome how long it's lasting. I'm really hoping it clears up on it's own at some point before my bedtime, otherwise I'm praying for resolution come the next morning, which sometimes occurs if this sort of thing happens at night. In the meantime, I'm trying not to stress too much as I've had plenty of that with COVID-19, financial concerns, and a freshly pulled back muscle from weightlifting. So I'm waiting it out for the night and just taking a walk on the treadmill, having a glass of whiskey to calm the nerves and forget about the seemingly damaged ear.
Has anyone else experienced the muffling sensation and noise sensitivity with a spike? I'm worrying that something more serious may now be going on, like a permanent reduction in hearing.
But often the sensation subsides after a number of hours, sometimes even minutes, or with sleep and then the ringing returns to my baseline volume, along with the ear fullness dissipating and all seems well enough again. Well, today I'm sitting here in the early evening having had a spike in the middle of the previous night that awoke me from my sleep, which I didn't let bother me too much and promptly fell back asleep. However upon waking, there's the damn "full ear" sensation and sound sensitivity again. But now, it's been over 8 hours and there's been no change.
I'm having to sit in a quiet room away from family and noise, because noise has become largely uncomfortable and causes my hearing to dampen and the tinnitus to spike in response. It's worrisome how long it's lasting. I'm really hoping it clears up on it's own at some point before my bedtime, otherwise I'm praying for resolution come the next morning, which sometimes occurs if this sort of thing happens at night. In the meantime, I'm trying not to stress too much as I've had plenty of that with COVID-19, financial concerns, and a freshly pulled back muscle from weightlifting. So I'm waiting it out for the night and just taking a walk on the treadmill, having a glass of whiskey to calm the nerves and forget about the seemingly damaged ear.
Has anyone else experienced the muffling sensation and noise sensitivity with a spike? I'm worrying that something more serious may now be going on, like a permanent reduction in hearing.