Except what I'm going through must ostensibly not be a cochlear issue. It doesn't make any sense that it is. When a hair cell is damaged it's supposed to be damaged forever. It doesn't make sense that my sound distortions fluctuate wildly on a day to day basis. This wasn't caused by a standard acoustic trauma or anything, I had a severe barotrauma in 2019 and all of the symptoms i had from a barotrauma conveniently returned now.
Noise exposure does not do a thing to my dysacusis, it fluctuates on its own.
I have wild pressure changes just from the slightest changes in altitude or even head position. My dysacusis is mathematically related to it, it fluctuates with the pressure changes.
I also have vertigo and facial pains and now, physical thumping. Of course research in otology is so shit we don't know if it's the tensor tympani, or the stapes, or the eustachian tubes, or straight up cochlear damage. Who knows. My middle ear myoclonus is becoming more and more debilitating.
Depending on who I visit it's suspected hydrops (since I have vertigo), a fistula or maybe even otosclerosis, again who knows.
There are people WHO GET STRAIGHT UP MYOCLONUS from acoustic traumas and magically improve to their pre "hyperacusis" state from stapedomoty, tetonomy, or like
@GregCA where he improved vastly from surgery.
I don't believe dysacusis has anything to do with cochlear hair cell death given this prerequisite. It could also be that my eustachian tubes are messed up, which I have a history of, and sound is reverberating where it shouldn't be reverberating, creating distortions.
As an audio engineer I know this is a surefire way to create nasty distortions in sound. Not to mention I have autophony, and pulsatile tinnitus, which again I've NEVER had before and it fluctuates along with my dysacusis.
A guy named Sim Roesems was CURED of my symptoms through eardrum reinforcement, having Bonain's solution dripped down his ears, an operation to remove cysts from his eustachian tubes, and Lidocaine injections at various trigger points including behind the ears and on the trigeminal nerve.
How does cochlear damage play into this at all? How does the middle ear play into this? We will never know, because compared to the cochlea, the middle ear has the shittiest medical literature in otology. Ruined by jastreboffites who first set the entirety of otology back decades, and now they infest the "hidden hearing loss" crowd too in medical literature.
I'm going to just pull a Michael Leigh and just say, hyperacusis, at least "true hyperacusis" just doesn't exist. It's almost as if the Jastreboff crowd and psychiatrists who are attempting to do otologists' work just lumped in a bunch of real, physical ear problems together, called them "hyperacusis", blamed their patients for it because of dogwhistles like "stress" or "setbacks" or "sensitivity". Whenever we come up with more precise etiologies like "noxacusis", "diplacusis", "reactive tinnitus" etc. we are told by the sound therapist crowd that actively sets out to block research of what we call "hyperacusis" that these etiologies don't actually exist.