Went to a ENT PA today. He thinks I have Cochlear Hydrops but he can't officially diagnose me with it b/c I don't have a previous hearing test on file and today's was normal. Can anyone tell me what I can expect with this disease?
I have had Cochlear hydrops for at least 20 years, stating about when I was 40. Starting with left ear the tinnitus increased with the hearing loss. The hydrops moved into my right ear about 5 years ago and with it some tinnitus but a long of ear discomfort. As the left ear is so deaf, I have been able to monitor the severe hearing loss bouts that have left me for short periods of time, very deaf and in some cases without being about to hear voices over a phone, differentiate a song until I heard the words...
After a series of high salt intake meals I realized that this was the cause of my hearing loss. In saying that is has been many years and a real process of elimination. This year I heard there is a world renown researcher/ practicing ENT close and after a meeting he confirmed my finding of high salt intake causing my hearing problems.
I have since virtually removed the likes of cheese (yep the biggy) chips, salted nuts, crackers, soups with stock, gravy and almost all sauces, salami, bacon and ham - oh and liquorice- and for some time I have been bout free. The ENT also gave me a 'morning after' diuretic for when dining out salt gets applied to dishes that I cannot taste .
I still drink wine and have coffee (a diuretic) thank goodness as a salt reduced diet is dreadfully boring. I still eat low salt bread and cereal, as I feel I should still get some salt into my diet. I have become a labels reader, but what's most important is the salt per 100g. 100g of soup is a very small bowl of soup so you end up eating quite a bit of salt in a large bowl of soup, and when you each cheese you eat chunks at a time.
The ear pressure can be quite painful and this has also gone with the change in diet. I also had to put to bed the reasoning that my hearing loss was stress related, but in fact it was what I was eating when stressed! My hearing loss was usually after the weekend, again, that was when I ate the chips, nuts cheeses. I have been down the weather, barometric pressure, you name it track, but now, for me I can nail the cause, and thankfully manage it.
I have never had a Menieres attack, I do not suffer from nausea, vomiting or vertigo. Chochlear hydrops is quite a rare condition, and does take several trips to the audiologist to identify the hearing fluctuations.
The plus side, I have lost 6kg in 4 months, and still dropping!
If you are new to Cochlear hydrops, then consider seriously what your ENT is telling you, and look at what you are eating. I am profoundly deaf in my left ear even with a hearing aid, and now need a hearing aid for my right ear. Until I nailed the cause I was heading down the track of a cochlear transplant in a few years, just so I could continue working. Oh I wish I knew what I know now 20 years ago....