Is It Severe Tinnitus When You Hear the Tinnitus Very Clearly Over Most Noises?

Natester1986

Member
Author
Aug 31, 2018
21
38
Iowa
Tinnitus Since
August 22, 2018
Cause of Tinnitus
Loud noise exposure/Lexapro
I'm new to this forum (found it via Google search yesterday). My tinnitus is pretty bad (I can hear it all the time although it's not deafening). It worsened on Wednesday evening of last week and especially since Monday. I still function well (hasn't really affected my life as I've gotten used to it).

So, the question is, if the tinnitus is not deafening but you hear it over any noise, is it severe tinnitus?

EDIT: I should clarify that I'm still able to sleep soundly without the use of tinnitus masking apps. Also, I don't have any pain in my ears although on occasion I do feel slightly dizzy.
 
I'm new to this forum (found it via Google search yesterday). My tinnitus is pretty bad (I can hear it all the time although it's not deafening). It worsened on Wednesday evening of last week and especially since Monday. I still function well (hasn't really affected my life as I've gotten used to it).

So, the question is, if the tinnitus is not deafening but you hear it over any noise, is it severe tinnitus?

EDIT: I should clarify that I'm still able to sleep soundly without the use of tinnitus masking apps. Also, I don't have any pain in my ears although on occasion I do feel slightly dizzy.
Is it very high frequency? That can be a reason it can be heard above everything when mine changes frequency. Not many things out there that are that high frequency to mask it.
 
@Natester1986 there is quite a bit of debate, or difference of opinion on this site. IMHO severity is a measure of its impact on your life, others believe that only volume matters. By the volume scale, if you can hear it above a shower... then it's pretty loud. But, if you follow the THI, then it's not. And you are a great example of how volume does not correlate with its intrusiveness.
 
My tinnitus would rank as a 7 although I've had it go as high as a 9. I don't have any hearing loss though.

Did you do an audiogram in higher frequencies, so above 8khz?
Have you done DPOAE?
 

I can't hear anything above 13500 hz. I must be deaf to those frequencies. The funny thing is, listening to the whole thing made my tinnitus go down from 7 to 2. Right now my tinnitus is around 4 although it's likely going to go back up to 6 or 7.
 
I can't hear anything about 13500 hz. I must be deaf to those frequencies. The funny thing is, listening to the whole thing made my tinnitus go down from 7 to 2.

I dont hear anything at 10khz on either ears.
 
@Natester1986 there is quite a bit of debate, or difference of opinion on this site. IMHO severity is a measure of its impact on your life, others believe that only volume matters. By the volume scale, if you can hear it above a shower... then it's pretty loud. But, if you follow the THI, then it's not. And you are a great example of how volume does not correlate with its intrusiveness.
Well technically speaking, we (the volume crowd) are 100% correct. It make sense no sense to measure something objective like tinnitus with a subjective scale.
 
It make sense no sense to measure something objective like tinnitus with a subjective scale.
If T didn't have any impact on the sufferer, we wouldn't care about T. So it is the impact that we care about, and that impact is subjective...

My guess is that the louder the volume, the less variability in the impact. This means that when the volume is loud, finding out just how loud it is would give us a good idea about the impact that it is having on the patient. But the subjective scale would allow us to learn this information about the other patients (whose T might not be very loud, but who might experience significant impact of T on their lives).
 
I'd say it depends upon the individual.

I have 24/7 low frequency T that I hear over everything, and I do mean everything. Last week, I heard it clearly over an aeroplane engine for three hours. Right now I'm watching the t.v and it's blaring away. Would I say this is severe? No. It's just ... there. I hear it, but do not actively listen to it. Today, I'll go about my tasks, and not be stressed by it. It has taken me about six months to get to this point though. Many take longer, so I consider myself lucky.
 

Log in or register to get the full forum benefits!

Register

Register on Tinnitus Talk for free!

Register Now