I have loudness hyperacusis with reactive tinnitus. Back in July, I had the lightsaber buzzing sound as well, but that went away for me. Good chance it will for you too or lessen dramatically.@Matchbox, did the light saber sounds go away?
I am having those really bad right now. It started 6 weeks ago after listening to headphones at low volume for a couple hours each day (5 days of use). I was trying to treat my hyperacusis with pink noise and was told to use the open ear headphones, and now regret it. I had mild light saber sounds (1 out of 10) prior to the headphones.
Well it ramped them up in intensity.
Now, sometimes they're a 2 out of 10 (not so bad), but sometimes they're around a 4 or 5, which is very intrusive due to the pulsating nature of the sound; sometimes they're an 8 or 9, which gets insane. It also morphs into what sounds like a car engine idling or someone beating a drum. When it's super intense, it's roaring with a drumbeat effect. If I'm in a room that's 40 dB, I can't hear the sound even at its worst. It totally masks it.
I thought about trying to get Prednisone and even asked my ENT a couple weeks ago, but he didn't think it would help. I am worried that Prednisone could make it even worse.
The problem has been mostly the same for the last 6 weeks with some good days, but it changes by the hour. It can be a 4 right now and be an 8 the next hour. I'm worried and not sure if this will improve over time. It's very reactive with my hyperacusis and all. I get distortions and sounds overplayed over other sound sometimes. I'm hoping that the light saber sounds will improve, too, once the hyperacusis is stable. Not sure what to expect, though. It is scary.
Similar thing happens to me when I yawn. The tinnitus gets amplified to an excessive level and different tone. I also get random eardrum spasms.Nothing to report, still fucking awful distortions, tinnitus and attempting to work remotely.
Hearing loud things now causes face numbness on the right side.
Yawning still causes twang sounds in my ears when the ear drums flex, both ears.
Didn't try the sodium channel blocker yet because if I get worse Ill miss work and be fired.
I've been thinking about stem cells if I have no choice, even if it induces neuron growth. Ultimately I have firm beliefs in BDNF injections to save me when they're finally approved. Of course if I worsen by then...Yawning causes my right ear to scream at something like 60-70 dB (the one where I have multiple Morse code beeps that get louder when I lie down). I suspect it might be Tensor Tympani muscle, but who knows at this point.
Hearing distortions over external sounds is, I think, hyperacusis + recruitment due to hearing loss. I experience this, too, with any broadband noise causing beeps and hums. Like rustling bedsheets, so I wake up when I shuffle in bed. It's hell.
Hang in there. Are you considering stem cells at all? Or HPN-07?
This has come and gone, thanks ZF.I have loudness hyperacusis with reactive tinnitus. Back in July, I had the lightsaber buzzing sound as well, but that went away for me. Good chance it will for you too or lessen dramatically.
You sound like me a bit. Odd that we're getting low freq bullshit noises too. I can attest to someone beating a drum quickly in pulsatile sets, constantly.@Matchbox, did the light saber sounds go away?
I am having those really bad right now. It started 6 weeks ago after listening to headphones at low volume for a couple hours each day (5 days of use). I was trying to treat my hyperacusis with pink noise and was told to use the open ear headphones, and now regret it. I had mild light saber sounds (1 out of 10) prior to the headphones.
Well it ramped them up in intensity.
Now, sometimes they're a 2 out of 10 (not so bad), but sometimes they're around a 4 or 5, which is very intrusive due to the pulsating nature of the sound; sometimes they're an 8 or 9, which gets insane. It also morphs into what sounds like a car engine idling or someone beating a drum. When it's super intense, it's roaring with a drumbeat effect. If I'm in a room that's 40 dB, I can't hear the sound even at its worst. It totally masks it.
I thought about trying to get Prednisone and even asked my ENT a couple weeks ago, but he didn't think it would help. I am worried that Prednisone could make it even worse.
The problem has been mostly the same for the last 6 weeks with some good days, but it changes by the hour. It can be a 4 right now and be an 8 the next hour. I'm worried and not sure if this will improve over time. It's very reactive with my hyperacusis and all. I get distortions and sounds overplayed over other sound sometimes. I'm hoping that the light saber sounds will improve, too, once the hyperacusis is stable. Not sure what to expect, though. It is scary.
I chuckled reading this, but I hate how you are suffering from this nonsense. I really hope some positive breakthrough will happen to you down the line. A guy like you deserves it. You are a breath of knowledge on this board and the way you help newcomers out is commendable AF.This has come and gone, thanks ZF.
I've got other fun now, there's a snow speeder or buzzing electronic bee now. Then it was AT-AT blasters before.
Maybe this is where the sound engineer for Star Wars got these effects.
It was systemic (intramuscular) Dexamethasone, and nope, nothing.So Dexamethasone shots in your ears did shit all for you hey?
I can recreate what Liberman et al. did in their cochlear synaptopathy model (NT-3+polymer matrix). I think that will be my last resort.Ultimately I have firm beliefs in BDNF injections to save me when they're finally approved. Of course if I worsen by then...
I'd advise to never walk by traffic without single or double protection. We don't need to hear those sounds, and we should try not to put our health in the hands of other people.I got a lovely new pure tone eeee today, probably from walking outside near (not so busy) traffic. Terrific.
I can't speak for @Matchbox, but I think I recalled him saying that they helped him tremendously while on them, but then immediately got worse once off them. I think he said it's a gamble. it's main priority is for any sudden hearing loss.@Matchbox, do you think I'd benefit from Prednisone at this point? I'm 6 weeks in from this new spike or tinnitus. It's really scaring me because it's so intrusive in the way it sounds. It's not a pure tone - it's the constant light saber and car engine and drumbeat. It fluctuates in intensity from 2-3 all the way to 8. But it never gets louder than 37 dB.
I dunno whether Prednisone could help or make matters worse at this point?
It stops ringing tinnitus imo. Very well. Very temporarily.I can't speak for @Matchbox, but I think I recalled him saying that they helped him tremendously while on them, but then immediately got worse once off them. I think he said it's a gamble. it's main priority is for any sudden hearing loss.
I guess everyone is different with how they handled steroids. For me I took Methylprednisolone 4 weeks after my onset, it's didn't do anything. It gave me terrible side effects like insomnia, and high levels of anxiety. I believe it may have actually changed my tone to a rumbling engine sound .I also had random bouts with hearing distortions after off them. Not sure if this is all connected with the steroids though, but it seemed like it.
For the meantime, I would stick to supplements like NAC, vitamin C, E, Turmeric and wait to see what @Matchbox has to say if this puts you at ease.
He sounds like a fucking idiot.@Matchbox, thanks for the info. Do you think it's too late for me to try Prednisone? It's been almost 7 weeks since the incident that spiked my tinnitus - listening to low volume pink noise through headphones. I tried to get Prednisone 2.5 weeks after but my ENT didn't think it'd help. But he also said headphones wouldn't have caused the problem, so...
Can you explain why it helps tinnitus temporarily and why some get tones with Prednisone? I found my ears were sensitive to noise while on it.He sounds like a fucking idiot.
Steroids will help, the consensus is up to 6 weeks out. The fact it helps people over a year later should say something. My ENT was the same, too late for shots when no, it wasn't. He just couldn't be bothered.
That said. Do one course, taper insanely slowly, then don't do it again (at least for 6 months) unless you actually go deaf.
Headphones, no shit, will make it worse.
You will likely get temporary tones while tapering off.
I cannot explain why some people are lucky enough to get worse.Can you explain why it helps tinnitus temporarily and why some get tones with Prednisone? I found my ears were sensitive to noise while on it.
Thanks for explaining. Man you know your shit lol. So basically Prednisone shouldn't be used by everyone, and if used, then taper extremely slow... Got it.I cannot explain why some people are lucky enough to get worse.
I can say the tones I got on Prednisone were due to more noise exposure whilst on it, and from tapering too quickly/being on it too long at too high a dosing.
If you're gonna be in silence and do a quick blast and proper long taper... I think the majority would be a ok, but all will spike hard tapering off. Seems to be a theme and a temporary one. My tones I gained whilst on it went away. The ones I was treating went away "temporarily".
Prednisone affects the mineral receptors (I don't know in what capacity) as well which is why Im really not fond of it for acoustic trauma when hydrops may already be present (could make them worse, acoustic trauma forms temporary hydrops in mice models, in fact for those studies hypertonic saline solution injected or Lasix both helped the mice considerably recover synapses compared to controls).
Dexamethasone is superior in this respect, having pretty much nil affinity for that receptor, but it is much much stronger.
Keep in mind this is basically high level cortisol so it's literally feeding your brain stress. This may explain the increased acuity of sounds. Again... should be temporary in most of us.
If stress makes tinnitus worse, why use Prednisone? Inflammation and prosurvival of hair cells over neural impact I guess? I do recall it can impact the hippocampal neurons in a negative way (cortisol levels co-relate to anti-survival of those neurons). Physiological stress also does a lot of other things than just raise basal cortisol levels. Prednisone wouldn't likely have this impact as the "stimulus" is missing, and lots of people report steroids helping ultimately for tinnitus/hearing loss.
Those who get tinnitus from stress ironically I doubt Prednisone would be a good idea as it's central tinnitus and adding more synthetic stress isn't great.
Off and on. It's been hard to correlate thus far.Thanks for explaining. Man you know your shit lol. So basically Prednisone shouldn't be used by everyone, and if used, then taper extremely slow... Got it.
Have you tried a hydrops specific diet to see if it helps? They told me I had hydrops but just based on my dizziness from hearing loss.
Have you tried hearing aids or maskers? I just picked up hearing aids.Off and on. It's been hard to correlate thus far.
My tinnitus really bothers me in the low frequencies, yet my hearing loss there is minimal and no "real" dizziness.
What exactly is this and how would you do it?I can recreate what Liberman et al. did in their cochlear synaptopathy model (NT-3+polymer matrix). I think that will be my last resort.
Yes and no.Hi @Matchbox, how has the palinacousis been treating you these days? Notice any positive changes?
The mimicry has diminished for me to a great extent. I haven't done anything in particular. So far it only occurs when I hear a leaf blower being used. The noise it makes still lingers with me for another 30 minutes once it stops. Used to be longer but it's gotten much less. Such a bizarre symptom.
It's neurotrophin-3 and 17% Pluronic F127 in PBS, a very simple mixture. It requires an intratympanic injection, though.What exactly is this and how would you do it?