If you can't find an audiologist who performs a test that gives you the whole audio frequency spectrum, you can basically perform one on yourself. Using a sine sweep, you can simply figure out which frequencies you hear and which ones you don't. The thing is, the correct auditory nerve fibers are what amplify each frequency into our brain to allow us to hear that sound much louder and clearer. So as long as you "pick up" each frequency as each one goes by, that clearly indicates that those hair cells are intact right? The more in-going nerve fibers you have on each inner/outer hair cell, the better you'll be able to pick those frequencies up. Our hair cells are so incredibly microscopic that it really doesn't matter how many you have to have the ability to process sound much louder. Sound wave frequencies are all "heard" in our brain through the nerve fibers of the auditory nerve even though they are picked up by the hair cells. As I've also explained many times in different posts, we lose in-going nerve fibers through loud noise//aging factors and are replaced by out-going nerves which don't allow us to clearly and process sound loudly in our brain. Which is what I believe has happened to you and what causes what we call "Tinnitus".
But please give this frequency test a try. It's the full spectrum. You can use headphones or even play it from your laptop/computer speakers. Please make sure that there are no other sounds to distract your brains processing abilities when it is played, otherwise you will most likely miss the higher frequencies. I just have a feeling that you have not damaged any of your hair cells and just the auditory nerve fibers of your hearing. I can back that up because of how many incredibly loud shows I've played in bands, how much music I've listened to, how many jam sessions I've had, and the amount of other types of loud noises that have been involved in my life, yet when I've performed my own hearing frequency tests, I can still hear from 200 hz to 20,000 khz. Also to include the fact that so much emotional and physical changes have happened to me over the past months that made it feel like I literally did lose the hair cells of my hearing. But I've performed the test on this site as of lately and I can still hear the whole thing besides all the changes in the way I hear. With all the awful things going on, it's very amusing.
What exactly caused your hearing issues again Bill? Was it acoustic trauma?
Here is a link to the frequency test. Perform the Logarithmic one.
Link:
http://www.audiocheck.net/testtones_sinesweep20-20k.php