Then I noticed your cause of tinnitus. You may well have had something oto-toxic intraoperatively (Doctors wouldn't know or much care), and when you "noticed" your tinnitus its because the initial neurological damage which may have begun in or near the time of surgery was cascading upwards and crossed the threshold where tinnitus became evident. You became obsessed because we all have a limbic response that forces it to our attention as an alien threat (which as far as the autonomic bran is concerned, it is). Since then your brain has learned to categorize it as non-threatening and has stood itself down because it knows you are experiencing some recovery. Sometimes all it takes is a seemingly benign drug being injected too quickly.When I first noticed my T it was a light hiss and then I listened for it all the time and became obsessed with it listening for it day and night. We obviously make it louder listening for it and getting all stressed out about it and feeding the brain with this fight or flight mental phenomina. Eight monthes in and dont really hear it half of the time and when I do im not stressed out about it. I can hone in on birds chirping and not hear the T. I think when you come to terms that T is not going to hurt you you listen for it less when paying attention to other things or sounds. With me every week seem s to get a little bit better and hopefully one day I wont hear it at all... My T is high pitched and could hear over the TV, car and only in the shower I couldnt hear it.
Yeah totally agree but I still don't think that all people have T. Right after I damaged my ears, I had no T but hearing loss. I went for a hearing test and there is no way in hell I heard anything in that room, no hissing nothing, just dead silence. At the most I may have been straining to detect beeps and could have maybe imagined something and hit the button at the wrong time, but that's it.There is a massive difference between tinnitus and head noise. Most people will be able to barely perceive a hiss, buzz, or ring in a dead silent anechoic chamber. A problem arises when you can hear sounds like this anywhere, or it is accompanied by other symptoms.
Yeah totally agree but I still don't think that all people have T. Right after I damaged my ears, I had no T but hearing loss. I went for a hearing test and there is no way in hell I heard anything in that room, no hissing nothing, just dead silence. At the most I may have been straining to detect beeps and could have maybe imagined something and hit the button at the wrong time, but that's it.
Yeah totally agree but I still don't think that all people have T. Right after I damaged my ears, I had no T but hearing loss. I went for a hearing test and there is no way in hell I heard anything in that room, no hissing nothing, just dead silence. At the most I may have been straining to detect beeps and could have maybe imagined something and hit the button at the wrong time, but that's it.