- Dec 31, 2018
- 47
- Tinnitus Since
- 1980s Concerts Hyperacusis Since: 2015
- Cause of Tinnitus
- Loud Music and Occupational Hazards as a Young Adult
Hi all,
(please skip down to the paragraph starting with "Therefore" if you are only wanting to see my question)
I have been a member for a few months, but this is my first post. I wanted to learn all I could from you wonderful people, so I replaced my normal hobby of building and maintaining Linux operating systems for people, to using your posts (godsends) as the knowledge-base of my tinnitus & hyperacusis therapy.
So, now it is time to come out of hiding, I suppose.
I am 53, and have had low-grade tinnitus since a front-row-rock-concert exposure, at a big-city arena, back in the early 1980s. This never was an issue, but when my wife insisted on getting a dog with a loud screeching bark - and then more - a few years ago, my tinnitus became much worse - and then hyperacusis arrived. My family now includes these screechers - and there is nothing which can change there (short of divorce).
Anyway, I have been accumulating earmuffs and earplugs of every variety. Pelter X-5-A are the ones that work the best; but of course they render me mostly unemployable, as well as a target, for the vicious folks who can come out of the woodwork when one appears exceedingly foolish in public (aside from directing planes, etc.).
Therefore, to keep my life in order, I mostly have been wearing earplugs around any expected exposure above 70-80 dB. At first, I couldn't get any of the bullet types to fit in my extremely narrow canal bend - so I used the barrel shaped variety to avoid needing to pass the canal bend. Then I got the HEAROS Ultimate softness, and they went in right. The only problem was that they fit so well that they did not de-pressurize when I twisted them to slowly pull out. Instead, they reversed-pressured, and popped in further. I, of course, was eventually able to get them out (very slowly) by the normal method - but the pressure and sharp pain, in both ears, while doing it was mind-blowing. The result is a moderate spike which has lasted for 2 & a half days. I have since ordered (probably my 20th new variety - attempting to find my apex) the Howard Leight: Max Lite Low Pressure foam, and we shall see about them when they arrive.
Hence, my question is pretty simple: is there much possibility that the reverse-pressure caused any thing permanent - what was happening to activate such sharp pain? The pressure was more than I figure anything in the ear could tolerate well - and still be unaffected. I'm telling you, the ear-pressure-pain (only during removal) was the worst of any type of ear pain in all my long years. First, intolerably sharp pain - then muffled tinnitus spike - then, the next day on, just the tinnitus spike.
Thanks for reading, you are all awesome!
(please skip down to the paragraph starting with "Therefore" if you are only wanting to see my question)
I have been a member for a few months, but this is my first post. I wanted to learn all I could from you wonderful people, so I replaced my normal hobby of building and maintaining Linux operating systems for people, to using your posts (godsends) as the knowledge-base of my tinnitus & hyperacusis therapy.
So, now it is time to come out of hiding, I suppose.
I am 53, and have had low-grade tinnitus since a front-row-rock-concert exposure, at a big-city arena, back in the early 1980s. This never was an issue, but when my wife insisted on getting a dog with a loud screeching bark - and then more - a few years ago, my tinnitus became much worse - and then hyperacusis arrived. My family now includes these screechers - and there is nothing which can change there (short of divorce).
Anyway, I have been accumulating earmuffs and earplugs of every variety. Pelter X-5-A are the ones that work the best; but of course they render me mostly unemployable, as well as a target, for the vicious folks who can come out of the woodwork when one appears exceedingly foolish in public (aside from directing planes, etc.).
Therefore, to keep my life in order, I mostly have been wearing earplugs around any expected exposure above 70-80 dB. At first, I couldn't get any of the bullet types to fit in my extremely narrow canal bend - so I used the barrel shaped variety to avoid needing to pass the canal bend. Then I got the HEAROS Ultimate softness, and they went in right. The only problem was that they fit so well that they did not de-pressurize when I twisted them to slowly pull out. Instead, they reversed-pressured, and popped in further. I, of course, was eventually able to get them out (very slowly) by the normal method - but the pressure and sharp pain, in both ears, while doing it was mind-blowing. The result is a moderate spike which has lasted for 2 & a half days. I have since ordered (probably my 20th new variety - attempting to find my apex) the Howard Leight: Max Lite Low Pressure foam, and we shall see about them when they arrive.
Hence, my question is pretty simple: is there much possibility that the reverse-pressure caused any thing permanent - what was happening to activate such sharp pain? The pressure was more than I figure anything in the ear could tolerate well - and still be unaffected. I'm telling you, the ear-pressure-pain (only during removal) was the worst of any type of ear pain in all my long years. First, intolerably sharp pain - then muffled tinnitus spike - then, the next day on, just the tinnitus spike.
Thanks for reading, you are all awesome!