Hyperacusis = Constant Pain or Not?

Do you feel any better? How is your tinnitus and did your hearing perhaps get a little bit better?

I just don't even bother with my hearing loss anymore. I just don't care about it. My Tinnitus is relatively the same but it's arguably hyperacusis induced. Funny enough, at the highschool I now attend I'm in a room of relative silence for 5 hrs. I hear my Tinnitus the entire time. And it has 0 effect on my quality of life and my work performance. I guess I've grown to accept the constant ringing and mellow hissing.
 
I'm feeling the stabbing pain now. Can the car AC could be causing it?
Tbh you would rather want stabbing pain instead of lingering pain. My theory is stabbing pain and loudness is due to due to chemical inbalances within either the auditory nerve or central auditory cortex. But lingering pain is thought by many to be auditory nerve damage.

But don't take my word as the Bible because honestly, Hyperacusis is still a very unknown and not well researched disorder/ condition.
 
I just don't even bother with my hearing loss anymore. I just don't care about it. My Tinnitus is relatively the same but it's arguably hyperacusis induced. Funny enough, at the highschool I now attend I'm in a room of relative silence for 5 hrs. I hear my Tinnitus the entire time. And it has 0 effect on my quality of life and my work performance. I guess I've grown to accept the constant ringing and mellow hissing.

Would you say your T is mild or moderate?
Have you done DPOAE?
Have you done an audiogram above 8khz?
 
I'm feeling the stabbing pain now. Can the car AC could be causing it?

Also I doubt an AC system could be causing. But I want to highlight that I am not you. Therefore what my tolerance level to sound is, is different to yours. But ask yourself this, maybe AC is bothering your Hyperacusis or is it anxiety and fear of having noise induced sensitivity? Possibly both?

Were you taking any supplements? Or medication?

I took magnesium glycate for a while and I believe vit C and A. However, id only recommend magnesium. I took airborne for a while on days I was around loud noise. However, I did not take them the entire time of my recovery. So I can't say if they helped or not because I still recovered. But what I can say helped is 1 reduced my anxiety. 2 got adequate rest. 3 protected my ears when I felt needed.


I just want to mention that, I'm still recovering! I'm currently on the bus wearing musucians earplugs. Not to say the bus bothers me or hurts my Hyperacusis but it's like a comfort blanket for my anxiety.
 
I just don't even bother with my hearing loss anymore. I just don't care about it. My Tinnitus is relatively the same but it's arguably hyperacusis induced. Funny enough, at the highschool I now attend I'm in a room of relative silence for 5 hrs. I hear my Tinnitus the entire time. And it has 0 effect on my quality of life and my work performance. I guess I've grown to accept the constant ringing and mellow hissing.
Me too. I have accepted it. I am only scared of H coming back like it was before. I kind of hoped that your hearing loss maybe reversed on its own. I mean you are young and, if I am correct, you don't have any genetical predispositions for hearing loss, so I thought that maybe the hair cells recovered. Well, as long as you can function normally, that is the most important thing.
 
Acoustic Trauma, kind of like a bruise.

Hyperacusis in 90% of time gets better, but sometimes sadly it remains permanent. Have Sound Machine on when you sleep at night, set it below the tinnitus. I am still dealing with hyperacusis from my second acoustic trauma that I got in January.
Take Magnesium that melts in the water for hyperacusis and drink ginger tea. This helped me. Ginkgo biloba is also good for hyperacusis...
 
I have doubts...

Can hyperacusis be improved? What is the best thing to do? Silence? Exposed to moderate sounds? Pink or purple noise?

What has helped you? Tell me please.

Anyone who had constant pain and now it's all gone, give me your strategy.
What are the audiologist saying, TRT CBT and ignoring the research that it's peripheral neuropathy.
 

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