@Lisa123 did you see a doctor? I'd discuss with the ENT a course of prednisone and non-ototoxic anthibiotics
If ENT diagnosed an infection, the anthibiotics should work in 4-7 days. I'd give a try to prednisone tooYes I did, I have been taking anti-hestamines and anti-biotics (amoxicilline) for 2 days now. My ear doesn't hurt anymore, but it still feels 'full' and the ringing persists
The sense of fullness is normal at this stage, once recovered it will go away together with the ringing. Don't focus on it!Yes my GP diagnosed an infection (to get to an ENT where I live you have to atleast wait 2 weeks) and prescribed me those medicines.
I totally agree, but I'd start with a higher dosage (of course, always to discuss with doctor!)take methylprednisolone immediately together with amoxicillin
start with 32mg methylprednisolone and from response you will see what you do after.
antibiotic will clear infection but corticosteroids will clear inflammation quickly.
If you don't clear inflammation you will kill bacteria but can be too late for inner ear.
In these conditions with antibiobitics must get and corticosteroids together.
Is life saving if you get it quickly before inflammation expands.
The 1st problem is the inflammation and 2nd problem the bacteria.
You must kill bacteria that cause inflammation but first must stop inflammation.
There are cases that bacteria killed but inflammation continues for some days more so the
damage can be done from your immune system response to bacteria and from bacteria itself
for this reason methylprednisolone is essential in therapy of bacteria.
In reality corticosteroids does not kill bacteria but after some use help bacteria to expand
because the stop immune response. But if you get for 2-3 days you avoid the catastrophic
side effects of inflammation until antibiotic kill bacteria.
I think that your ent is not good you tell that you have ringing and it did not give you corticosteroids? Damn idiot.
Take immediately corticosteroids every second you loose the possibilities to recover reduce dramatically.
take methylprednisolone immediately together with amoxicillin
start with 32mg methylprednisolone and from response you will see what you do after.
antibiotic will clear infection but corticosteroids will clear inflammation quickly.
If you don't clear inflammation you will kill bacteria but can be too late for inner ear.
In these conditions with antibiobitics must get and corticosteroids together.
Is life saving if you get it quickly before inflammation expands.
The 1st problem is the inflammation and 2nd problem the bacteria.
You must kill bacteria that cause inflammation but first must stop inflammation.
There are cases that bacteria killed but inflammation continues for some days more so the
damage can be done from your immune system response to bacteria and from bacteria itself
for this reason methylprednisolone is essential in therapy of bacteria.
In reality corticosteroids does not kill bacteria but after some use help bacteria to expand
because the stop immune response. But if you get for 2-3 days you avoid the catastrophic
side effects of inflammation until antibiotic kill bacteria.
I think that your ent is not good you tell that you have ringing and it did not give you corticosteroids? Damn idiot.
Take immediately corticosteroids every second you loose the possibilities to recover reduce dramatically.
I totally agree, but I'd start with a higher dosage (of course, always to discuss with doctor!)
Everything seems to be fine now today. My left ear has calmed down. The ringing seems very faint now even when plugging my ears. Hopefully it'll stay this way. I'll keep this post updated. Perhaps to reassure those who are new to T and get an ear infection with their pre-existing T, that everything will be just fine
I was offered steroids 2 weeks after i got T. I figured this was too late and i could not find any science behind it.I am very glad that you are feeling better.
And FWIW, I am unaware of a single reliable and verifiable study indicating that steroids have any role whatsoever in cases such as yours. It's true that some doctors do prescribe them, but best I can determine it's more based on the idea, "Well, why not give steroids a shot - couldn't hurt" than on any science. For somebody posting here to needlessly scare you and to characterize your own doctor as a "Damn idiot" for practicing responsible evidence-based medicine is not my idea of what support boards should be about.
Dr. Stephen Nagler
Accordingly, proposed treatments include systemic or intratympanic steroids [60-62]