Markku, Louise,....and the rest The World:
This is your Tinnitus Reporter (and Karl Terzaghi impersonator) reporting back from the field. Today I am wearing very discrete hearing aids.
Yes, I have "seen the light" . There is indeed a difference - at least in my case. When I put these little buggers on, I could finally hear the higher frequencies that I haven't heard for perhaps 5 years. Just to hear these frequencies is amazing.
I'm wearing Widex Zen hearing aids, a sort of "bottom of the line" model: Cost $3000 for both. 45 day return policy. Very small, with a little remote control for volume and Zen background sound options.
Here's the scoop:
1. I had another audiogram. This verified that I still have hearing loss at 4kHz in my right ear. For other frequencies, my hearing is pretty good (in the 10-20db range).
2. My audiologist entered my audiogram into a computer program.
3. The Widex hearing aids were then programmed specifically based on my audiogram, using a Bluetooth connection.
4. There are various additional background sounds that I can listen to. Some of these background sounds are like wind chimes (called "Zen"). The sounds are somewhat random and don't repeat. I chose 3 of these additional sounds. There are perhaps 10 different sounds that I selected from. You don't need to listen to these background sounds.
5. The hearing aids can be reprogrammed in the future, as my hearing changes.
The Big Question: Do the hearing aids suppress my tinnitus? I don't want to mislead people, because we don't each have the same tinnitus. My tinnitus is not that bad. But seriously, it seems that my tinnitus is considerably suppressed. For example, I did not get my morning "buzz" this morning watching TV. Everything is so far, so good.
I have been very persistent in my own ideas about what is causing tinnitus, and hearing aids fit within the theory. It just seems obvious to me that, when we get hearing loss, the brain sends a distress signal back to the ear to "crank it up". That's tinnitus in a nutshell. With hearing loss, some nerves are left "twiddling their thumbs with little to do" - so these nerves make noise. Hearing aids gets these nerves working again, so they don't make noise.
There's an old Steely Dan song, "Through With Buzz", that appears on their Pretzel Logic album. Very cool, short song, that makes me think of tinnitus. I think that many people can benefit from hearing aids so that they can be "Through With Buzz".