I just figured that a jackhammer is as loud as 130 decibels. I was exposed to this sound in a tunnel, passing a building site for 30 seconds. I can never ever recover from this. I'm absolutely devastated.
> massive loss of nerve to hair cell connections caused by dangerous noise levelsI have a success story from a guy who was exposed to right around that decibel and for much longer than 30 seconds.
It took time, but he made a full recovery. You will get through this. Spikes are just that. Spikes. Lots of love.
Many people do report their tinnitus fading, even after being exposed to dangerous noises...> massive loss of nerve to hair cell connections caused by dangerous noise levels
> full recovery
pick one
First of all, have you experienced a tinnitus spike or ear fullness as a result of this incident? If your tinnitus became louder, then it would make sense for you to worry about this spike being permanent only if you don't experience any fading after about a month. Temporary spikes can take over three months to fade. Of course this experience hasn't promoted your healing. Learn from it and do what you can to ensure that this doesn't happen again.I can never ever recover from this.
https://www.tinnitustalk.com/threads/back-to-normal.31789/> massive loss of nerve to hair cell connections caused by dangerous noise levels
> full recovery
pick one
Oh, I think that my message was a bit confusing. This is what happened to begin with, almost three months ago. If you read my first post. I didn't have tinnitus or hyperacusis. I was passing this tunnel, and I just figured out how loud the sound might be yesterday from searching around the web, because the ones with the responsibility for this are all lying to me.Many people do report their tinnitus fading, even after being exposed to dangerous noises...
First of all, have you experienced a tinnitus spike or ear fullness as a result of this incident? If your tinnitus became louder, then it would make sense for you to worry about this spike being permanent only if you don't experience any fading after about a month. Temporary spikes can take over three months to fade. Of course this experience hasn't promoted your healing. Learn from it and do what you can to ensure that this doesn't happen again.
I have a success story from a guy who was exposed to right around that decibel and for much longer than 30 seconds.
It took time, but he made a full recovery. You will get through this. Spikes are just that. Spikes. Lots of love.
If you have had tinnitus for only a few months I think you have a very good chance to recover. The thing about sound damage is that it is cumulative. The effect builds up over time and there is a point when things just dont go well.. but at the beginning you should be ok. The pressure, headaches, tinnitus and all that will be horrible after a sound like a jackhammer but in a month or so they should clear.
Thank youGive it time, it was a brief exposure. Sometimes a good nights sleep can help with resetting things back to where they were.
If exposed to loud noise again, and you're not the one driving, plug your ears with your fingers. Some form of protection is better than nothing.
I hope things improve for you quickly.
Thank you
I hope that too. But I haven't seen any improvement for three months soon...
130 decibels from a jackhammer are really loud, and walking in a tunnel, hearing that sound from outside. It was almost like they were hammering inside the tunnel! All my problems started that day. I didn't have tinnitus before that. It's like I died the 18th of April this year!
It should be ok, sometimes it takes a few months. Three months is a lot, but hearing takes a lot of time to recover. Have you been to an ENT? Go see what doctors say.
Seriously? Drs are useless when it comes to this condition.It should be ok, sometimes it takes a few months. Three months is a lot, but hearing takes a lot of time to recover. Have you been to an ENT? Go see what doctors say.
The doctors are useless (as always). I've already been there and saw one ENT who just told me that this will not go away. They did one audiogram. They cannot help me further.